Thurka Sangaramoorthy 著的《关怀的风景:美国农村地区的移民与健康》(评论)

IF 0.9 2区 哲学 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Theodore L. Michaels, Seth M. Holmes
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Through compelling vignettes, the book guides readers through the Eastern Shore’s “landscape,” as its history and current state shape its residents’ health: from macro features of racial capitalism and health care corporatization to local geographies of care, to ethnic hierarchies at workplaces (p. xiv). As a dual-trained medical anthropologist and public health practitioner, Sangaramoorthy aptly integrates concerns for pressing material disparities with diverse theorizations of precarity, infrastructure, and temporality.</p> <p>This book foregrounds the “inextricability of immigration and rural health” through three primary claims (p. 16). First, Sangaramoorthy contests “myth-making” about the rural as “pristine” and white to frame it instead as an area of remarkable poverty and flux of migrant workers (p. 15). Second, she situates racial capitalism as the fundamental organizing principle of immigrant health; immigration status, which has frequently occupied this position for popular media and many academics, is then shown to be a sequela of corporate interests.<sup>1</sup> Third, neo-liberal policies and extractive capitalism have withered rural health infrastructure to leave only an “archipelago” of “Band-Aid” care for those most in need (p. 113).</p> <p>Sangaramoorthy revises common portrayals of the rural United States as “overwhelmingly white and racially homogenous, geographically isolated, and stuck in time” (p. 25). Throughout rural areas, the historical decline of manufacturing and concomitant white flight engendered an influx of low-paying employers that attracted migrant workers. The Eastern Shore exemplifies the variegated nature of these patterns. The activity of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the primary governmental body incarcerating and deporting people without documentation, varies across geographic locales, thus corralling migrants to areas that experience less surveillance (p. 85). This tendency effectively reproduces segregation with a capitalist complexion: geographic overlap between low-wage industry and little surveillance indicates a functional collusion between the state and corporations. Compounding the complexity of these geographies, many migrants seasonally shuttle between Maryland and other locations, such as Florida, <strong>[End Page 335]</strong> for work. Sangaramoorthy’s incisive analysis of the rural recasts an antiquated stereotype into a topology of racist, bureaucratic, and political-economic vectors.</p> <p>In a second re-presentation, <em>Landscapes of Care</em> endeavors for racial capitalism to supplant immigration status as the conceptual center for interpreting issues of migrant labor and health. Sangaramoorthy problematizes the analytic of immigration for, on one hand, “[flattening] immigrant knowledge, experience, and social identities” (p. 11) and, on the other, limiting the horizons of interventions from questioning the state’s “foundational tenets” to creating “more humane” conditions for migrants (p. 121). Matters of immigration status frequently surface as this argument unfolds, though Sangaramoorthy consistently articulates them in relation to racial capitalism. For example, employers extensively drive immigration through H-2A and H-2B work visas (e.g., pp. 33, 50). To offer employment under these visas, companies must demonstrate the need for foreign workers, which motivates these companies to artificially portray need by inadequately advertising jobs (p. 57). When insufficient visas are granted, employers petition congress for visa expansions (p. 132). In this creation of a nationalist hierarchy, private interests effectively control the entrance of migrants and thus state policy. Ethnic and gendered hierarchies at the workplace imbricate as local corollaries to these transnational processes. Where Sangaramoorthy finds a tension between her analysis of these issues and those that employ theories of structural vulnerability (e.g., pp. 11, 50), we find an excellent focalization of certain critical elements in that literature that has articulated citizenship, class, racialization, gender, etc.<sup>2</sup> We admire Sangaramoorthy’s trenchant critique of how the racial and the gendered dimensions of labor interface with the capital-infused U.S. border.<sup>3</sup></p> <p>The third central argument of this...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":55304,"journal":{"name":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","volume":"84 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Landscapes of Care: Immigration and Health in Rural America by Thurka Sangaramoorthy (review)\",\"authors\":\"Theodore L. Michaels, Seth M. 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Through compelling vignettes, the book guides readers through the Eastern Shore’s “landscape,” as its history and current state shape its residents’ health: from macro features of racial capitalism and health care corporatization to local geographies of care, to ethnic hierarchies at workplaces (p. xiv). As a dual-trained medical anthropologist and public health practitioner, Sangaramoorthy aptly integrates concerns for pressing material disparities with diverse theorizations of precarity, infrastructure, and temporality.</p> <p>This book foregrounds the “inextricability of immigration and rural health” through three primary claims (p. 16). First, Sangaramoorthy contests “myth-making” about the rural as “pristine” and white to frame it instead as an area of remarkable poverty and flux of migrant workers (p. 15). Second, she situates racial capitalism as the fundamental organizing principle of immigrant health; immigration status, which has frequently occupied this position for popular media and many academics, is then shown to be a sequela of corporate interests.<sup>1</sup> Third, neo-liberal policies and extractive capitalism have withered rural health infrastructure to leave only an “archipelago” of “Band-Aid” care for those most in need (p. 113).</p> <p>Sangaramoorthy revises common portrayals of the rural United States as “overwhelmingly white and racially homogenous, geographically isolated, and stuck in time” (p. 25). Throughout rural areas, the historical decline of manufacturing and concomitant white flight engendered an influx of low-paying employers that attracted migrant workers. The Eastern Shore exemplifies the variegated nature of these patterns. The activity of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the primary governmental body incarcerating and deporting people without documentation, varies across geographic locales, thus corralling migrants to areas that experience less surveillance (p. 85). This tendency effectively reproduces segregation with a capitalist complexion: geographic overlap between low-wage industry and little surveillance indicates a functional collusion between the state and corporations. Compounding the complexity of these geographies, many migrants seasonally shuttle between Maryland and other locations, such as Florida, <strong>[End Page 335]</strong> for work. Sangaramoorthy’s incisive analysis of the rural recasts an antiquated stereotype into a topology of racist, bureaucratic, and political-economic vectors.</p> <p>In a second re-presentation, <em>Landscapes of Care</em> endeavors for racial capitalism to supplant immigration status as the conceptual center for interpreting issues of migrant labor and health. Sangaramoorthy problematizes the analytic of immigration for, on one hand, “[flattening] immigrant knowledge, experience, and social identities” (p. 11) and, on the other, limiting the horizons of interventions from questioning the state’s “foundational tenets” to creating “more humane” conditions for migrants (p. 121). Matters of immigration status frequently surface as this argument unfolds, though Sangaramoorthy consistently articulates them in relation to racial capitalism. For example, employers extensively drive immigration through H-2A and H-2B work visas (e.g., pp. 33, 50). To offer employment under these visas, companies must demonstrate the need for foreign workers, which motivates these companies to artificially portray need by inadequately advertising jobs (p. 57). When insufficient visas are granted, employers petition congress for visa expansions (p. 132). In this creation of a nationalist hierarchy, private interests effectively control the entrance of migrants and thus state policy. Ethnic and gendered hierarchies at the workplace imbricate as local corollaries to these transnational processes. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

评论者 Theodore L. Michaels 和 Seth M. Holmes Thurka Sangaramoorthy 著,《关怀的风景:美国农村地区的移民与健康》。社会医学研究》。社会医学研究》。Chapel Hill:Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2023.xxii + 174 pp.$22.95 (978-1-4696-7417-9).在《关怀的风景》一书中,Thurka Sangaramoorthy 邀请读者来到马里兰州的东海岸,这是一个极度偏远的农村地区,在过去的几十年中,由于海产品、畜牧业和农业的低工资就业机会,移民人数显著增加。本书通过引人入胜的小故事,引导读者领略东岸的 "风景",因为它的历史和现状塑造了居民的健康:从种族资本主义和医疗保健公司化的宏观特征,到当地的医疗保健地理环境,再到工作场所的种族等级制度(第 xiv 页)。作为一名接受过医学人类学和公共卫生双重培训的从业者,桑格拉莫西恰如其分地将对紧迫的物质差距的关注与对不稳定性、基础设施和时间性的不同理论整合在一起。这本书通过三个主要论点强调了 "移民与农村健康的不可分割性"(第 16 页)。首先,Sangaramoorthy 质疑了将农村描述为 "纯净 "和白人的 "神话",而将其描述为极端贫困和移民工人流动的地区(第 15 页)。其次,她将种族资本主义定位为移民健康的基本组织原则;移民身份经常占据大众媒体和许多学术界的这一位置,然后被证明是企业利益的后遗症。1 第三,新自由主义政策和榨取性资本主义使农村医疗基础设施枯竭,只剩下 "群岛式 "的 "创可贴 "医疗服务来照顾那些最需要帮助的人(第 113 页)。Sangaramoorthy 对美国农村 "绝大多数是白人、种族单一、地理位置偏僻、时间滞后"(第 25 页)的普遍描述进行了修正。在整个农村地区,制造业的历史性衰落和随之而来的白人外流导致低薪雇主大量涌入,吸引了大量外来务工人员。东海岸是这些模式多样化的典型代表。美国移民和海关执法局(ICE)是监禁和驱逐无证件者的主要政府机构,其活动因地理位置而异,从而将移民集中到监控较少的地区(第 85 页)。这种趋势有效地复制了带有资本主义色彩的种族隔离:低工资行业与监控较少地区之间的地理重叠表明了国家与企业之间的功能性勾结。许多移民季节性地穿梭于马里兰州和佛罗里达州等其他地方 [尾页 335]工作,加剧了这些地理环境的复杂性。桑格拉莫西对农村的精辟分析将一个陈旧的刻板印象重塑为种族主义、官僚主义和政治经济载体的拓扑结构。在第二次重新表述中,《关爱景观》努力使种族资本主义取代移民身份,成为解释移民劳工和健康问题的概念中心。Sangaramoorthy 对移民分析提出质疑,一方面,"[扁平化]移民的知识、经验和社会身份"(第 11 页),另一方面,限制了干预的视野,从质疑国家的 "基本原则 "到为移民创造 "更人道 "的条件(第 121 页)。在这一论点的展开过程中,移民身份问题经常出现,尽管桑格拉莫西始终将其与种族资本主义联系在一起。例如,雇主通过 H-2A 和 H-2B 工作签证广泛推动移民(如第 33 页和第 50 页)。要通过这些签证提供就业机会,公司必须证明对外国工人的需求,这促使这些公司通过不适当的招聘广告来人为地描述需求(第 57 页)。当发放的签证不足时,雇主就会向国会申请扩大签证范围(第 132 页)。在这种民族主义等级制度的建立过程中,私人利益有效地控制了移民的进入,从而也控制了国家政策。工作场所的种族和性别等级制度作为这些跨国过程的地方必然结果,相互交织在一起。桑格拉莫西发现,她对这些问题的分析与那些运用结构脆弱性理论的分析之间存在着紧张关系(例如,第 11 页和第 50 页),我们发现她很好地聚焦了那些阐述公民权、阶级、种族化、性别等问题的文献中的某些关键要素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Landscapes of Care: Immigration and Health in Rural America by Thurka Sangaramoorthy (review)

Reviewed by:

  • Landscapes of Care: Immigration and Health in Rural America by Thurka Sangaramoorthy
  • Theodore L. Michaels and Seth M. Holmes
Thurka Sangaramoorthy. Landscapes of Care: Immigration and Health in Rural America. Studies in Social Medicine. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2023. xxii + 174 pp. $22.95 (978-1-4696-7417-9).

In Landscapes of Care, Thurka Sangaramoorthy invites readers to Maryland’s Eastern Shore, a profoundly rural area that has seen a significant rise in immigration over the past decades for its low-wage employment opportunities in seafood, livestock, and agriculture. Through compelling vignettes, the book guides readers through the Eastern Shore’s “landscape,” as its history and current state shape its residents’ health: from macro features of racial capitalism and health care corporatization to local geographies of care, to ethnic hierarchies at workplaces (p. xiv). As a dual-trained medical anthropologist and public health practitioner, Sangaramoorthy aptly integrates concerns for pressing material disparities with diverse theorizations of precarity, infrastructure, and temporality.

This book foregrounds the “inextricability of immigration and rural health” through three primary claims (p. 16). First, Sangaramoorthy contests “myth-making” about the rural as “pristine” and white to frame it instead as an area of remarkable poverty and flux of migrant workers (p. 15). Second, she situates racial capitalism as the fundamental organizing principle of immigrant health; immigration status, which has frequently occupied this position for popular media and many academics, is then shown to be a sequela of corporate interests.1 Third, neo-liberal policies and extractive capitalism have withered rural health infrastructure to leave only an “archipelago” of “Band-Aid” care for those most in need (p. 113).

Sangaramoorthy revises common portrayals of the rural United States as “overwhelmingly white and racially homogenous, geographically isolated, and stuck in time” (p. 25). Throughout rural areas, the historical decline of manufacturing and concomitant white flight engendered an influx of low-paying employers that attracted migrant workers. The Eastern Shore exemplifies the variegated nature of these patterns. The activity of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the primary governmental body incarcerating and deporting people without documentation, varies across geographic locales, thus corralling migrants to areas that experience less surveillance (p. 85). This tendency effectively reproduces segregation with a capitalist complexion: geographic overlap between low-wage industry and little surveillance indicates a functional collusion between the state and corporations. Compounding the complexity of these geographies, many migrants seasonally shuttle between Maryland and other locations, such as Florida, [End Page 335] for work. Sangaramoorthy’s incisive analysis of the rural recasts an antiquated stereotype into a topology of racist, bureaucratic, and political-economic vectors.

In a second re-presentation, Landscapes of Care endeavors for racial capitalism to supplant immigration status as the conceptual center for interpreting issues of migrant labor and health. Sangaramoorthy problematizes the analytic of immigration for, on one hand, “[flattening] immigrant knowledge, experience, and social identities” (p. 11) and, on the other, limiting the horizons of interventions from questioning the state’s “foundational tenets” to creating “more humane” conditions for migrants (p. 121). Matters of immigration status frequently surface as this argument unfolds, though Sangaramoorthy consistently articulates them in relation to racial capitalism. For example, employers extensively drive immigration through H-2A and H-2B work visas (e.g., pp. 33, 50). To offer employment under these visas, companies must demonstrate the need for foreign workers, which motivates these companies to artificially portray need by inadequately advertising jobs (p. 57). When insufficient visas are granted, employers petition congress for visa expansions (p. 132). In this creation of a nationalist hierarchy, private interests effectively control the entrance of migrants and thus state policy. Ethnic and gendered hierarchies at the workplace imbricate as local corollaries to these transnational processes. Where Sangaramoorthy finds a tension between her analysis of these issues and those that employ theories of structural vulnerability (e.g., pp. 11, 50), we find an excellent focalization of certain critical elements in that literature that has articulated citizenship, class, racialization, gender, etc.2 We admire Sangaramoorthy’s trenchant critique of how the racial and the gendered dimensions of labor interface with the capital-infused U.S. border.3

The third central argument of this...

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来源期刊
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Bulletin of the History of Medicine 医学-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: A leading journal in its field for more than three quarters of a century, the Bulletin spans the social, cultural, and scientific aspects of the history of medicine worldwide. Every issue includes reviews of recent books on medical history. Recurring sections include Digital Humanities & Public History and Pedagogy. Bulletin of the History of Medicine is the official publication of the American Association for the History of Medicine (AAHM) and the Johns Hopkins Institute of the History of Medicine.
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