Description

Book Synopsis
The canyon in central Mexico was ablaze with torches as hundreds of people filed in. So palpable was their shared shock and grief, they later said, that neither pastor nor priest was needed. The event was a memorial service for one of their own who had died during an attempted border passage.

Trade Review
Sarat offers a fascinating ethnographic examination of the intersection of popular religious practices, Pentecostal faith, and the necessity forced upon individuals in economically challenging circumstances to migrate from Mexico to the United States. * Choice *
Fire in the Canyonwill engage readers at all levels with its accessible prose and memorable life stories. The chapter on Caminata Nocturna should especially interest undergraduate students with its unique perspectives on border crossing. [] Sarat conveys the great dedication to community that persists in this town, despite all the divisions that it facesof religious factionalism, modernization, and, most of all, immigration. * Hispanic American Historical Review *
[T]his study is an important contribution to migration studies, Pentecostal theology and the wider field of religion and the migration experience. While it is about the Mexican migration experience, it has implications for and is a resource for migration on a whole, especially that of the two-thirds world. * Pneuma *
Beautifully illustrates the complex intersections of religion and immigration, where even the successful navigation of the dangerous migrants journey across the U.S. border results not in the 'American dream,' but in continued poverty and marginalization. . . . Religion within the context of immigration is not merely one of 'the things they carry,' but fundamental to the journey, helping migrants to frame their understanding of suffering, to confront life-and-death, and to define their notions of the possible. Yet Sarat suggests that this understanding alone is not enough, arguing that religionmodern Pentecostalism in particularhelps empower people to look beyond simple religious tropes and issues of individual salvation to join collective efforts that seek to address the roots causes of migration and inequality. -- Virginia Garrard-Burnett,The University of Texas at Austin
Through finely woven voices and descriptions of actors and locations in a life drama that transcends geographical and religious borders, Leah Sarats ethnography of the indigenous people of El Alberto . . . offers its readers an opportunity to witness the fantastic capacity of seemingly marginal peoples to selectively appropriate religious and economic impositions in an effort to carve out a future that makes sense to them, and, hopefully their children. -- Ella Schmidt,author of The Dream Fields of Florida: Mexican Farmworkers and the Myth of Belonging

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction Part I 1. Fire from Heaven 2. Living Crosses 3. I Lift Up My Eyes to the North Part II 4. Send Us Power 5. To Crush the Devil's Head 6. Shielded by the Blood of Christ Part III 7. The Night Hike 8. The Mexican Dream Conclusion Glossary of Spanish and Hnahnu Terms Notes Bibliography Index About the Author

Fire in the Canyon

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    A Paperback / softback by Leah Sarat

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      Publisher: New York University Press
      Publication Date: 11/11/2013
      ISBN13: 9781479839780, 978-1479839780
      ISBN10: 1479839787

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The canyon in central Mexico was ablaze with torches as hundreds of people filed in. So palpable was their shared shock and grief, they later said, that neither pastor nor priest was needed. The event was a memorial service for one of their own who had died during an attempted border passage.

      Trade Review
      Sarat offers a fascinating ethnographic examination of the intersection of popular religious practices, Pentecostal faith, and the necessity forced upon individuals in economically challenging circumstances to migrate from Mexico to the United States. * Choice *
      Fire in the Canyonwill engage readers at all levels with its accessible prose and memorable life stories. The chapter on Caminata Nocturna should especially interest undergraduate students with its unique perspectives on border crossing. [] Sarat conveys the great dedication to community that persists in this town, despite all the divisions that it facesof religious factionalism, modernization, and, most of all, immigration. * Hispanic American Historical Review *
      [T]his study is an important contribution to migration studies, Pentecostal theology and the wider field of religion and the migration experience. While it is about the Mexican migration experience, it has implications for and is a resource for migration on a whole, especially that of the two-thirds world. * Pneuma *
      Beautifully illustrates the complex intersections of religion and immigration, where even the successful navigation of the dangerous migrants journey across the U.S. border results not in the 'American dream,' but in continued poverty and marginalization. . . . Religion within the context of immigration is not merely one of 'the things they carry,' but fundamental to the journey, helping migrants to frame their understanding of suffering, to confront life-and-death, and to define their notions of the possible. Yet Sarat suggests that this understanding alone is not enough, arguing that religionmodern Pentecostalism in particularhelps empower people to look beyond simple religious tropes and issues of individual salvation to join collective efforts that seek to address the roots causes of migration and inequality. -- Virginia Garrard-Burnett,The University of Texas at Austin
      Through finely woven voices and descriptions of actors and locations in a life drama that transcends geographical and religious borders, Leah Sarats ethnography of the indigenous people of El Alberto . . . offers its readers an opportunity to witness the fantastic capacity of seemingly marginal peoples to selectively appropriate religious and economic impositions in an effort to carve out a future that makes sense to them, and, hopefully their children. -- Ella Schmidt,author of The Dream Fields of Florida: Mexican Farmworkers and the Myth of Belonging

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Introduction Part I 1. Fire from Heaven 2. Living Crosses 3. I Lift Up My Eyes to the North Part II 4. Send Us Power 5. To Crush the Devil's Head 6. Shielded by the Blood of Christ Part III 7. The Night Hike 8. The Mexican Dream Conclusion Glossary of Spanish and Hnahnu Terms Notes Bibliography Index About the Author

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