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Off the Map: An Expedition Deep Into Empire and the Global Economy

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Today's global economy is yesterday's empire. Imperialism in whatever guise is the same through time, penetrating every area of our lives, affecting whole cultures as well as the deep core of individuals. And maps have been the tools of empire, defining the territory to be exploited.Off The Map is a unique exploration of globalization. Part history, part autobiography, and part fiction, it weaves together the history of the last 300 years of Western imperialism, the author's own story of sexual abuse in the 1950s, and a present-day horseback ride through the recently colonized Chicano world of New Mexico. The author takes us with her as she travels 'off the map' through the ancestral lands of her friend and traveling companion Snowflake Martinez, describing the Chicano people's struggle to survive the onslaught of a globalized world, and the ways in which that struggle has been replicated countless times. In a different voice, she reveals scenes from her childhood, her grandparents adorning themselves with artifacts symbolic of the British Empire, and her medical doctor father raping both her and her brother for twelve years. The political is deeply personal. And hope, according to Glendinning, resides in our creating new maps that chart worlds fashioned by love and respect for community, place and nature.A dazzling contribution to the critical study of globalization (qua imperialism). -- Devon Pe�a, author of Chicano Culture, Ecology, Subversive Kin

208 pages, ebook

First published September 28, 1999

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About the author

Chellis Glendinning

11 books20 followers

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Mark Valentine.
2,109 reviews28 followers
March 14, 2016
I journeyed with Glendinning into regions that I am not sure I comprehend but I know I certainly respect. I have never been traumatized like she has in her personal history yet I know enough of hate and power to empathize with her account of sexual conquest. Her first person account of being raped by her father is poignant to say the least and it gripped my being to the core--How could a father act so? She uses rape as a personal metaphor of how nation-states and multinational corporations "penetrate" into new markets and the connection gets established.

Also, I traveled with her off the map to a region of indigenous pride in which she journeyed with her guide to a meeting with others who collectively work out a plan of protest against the BLM or the latest hegemonic force of Empire. I respect Glendinning's handling of this real-life connection with Snowflake Martinez as a way to bridge between the two cultures: Anglo and Hispanic. It reminds me of the same narrative technique that Ivan Doig used in his memoir/biography, Winter Brothers. Travelling with Snowflake becomes a mentor/mentee journey (Jim/Huck?) in which two cultures get to be bridged and mutual understanding becomes the reward.

The most important pages of this biography/memoir/essay/social critique came in the final 30 pages. Glendinning writes in eloquent language, re-inforcing themes that she has already established, and underscored the message that we are in too deep with this hegemony thing. We have only a few more moments in which to escape and it is up to us to provide a better solution. The final pages were worth the entire book, but of course, she set this up to be so. I thoroughly respect and admire this short book about the West, about Empire, about Power.
Profile Image for Sam.
50 reviews1 follower
September 30, 2016
Dark and poetic critique of technology and industrial society.
Profile Image for Wendy.
Author 13 books62 followers
November 6, 2007
This book feels a bit dated now, though it’s not yet a decade old. Or perhaps I’ve outgrown this style of book: a little too obvious, a little too strident. Still, Glendinning does her thing quite well. The narrative thread of the book, perhaps one third of the extended essay’s total length, takes place over just one day. As I was reading it, it made me realize that it’s an important model to me in one way: I need to learn to write more about less. Off the Map happens almost in real time, which is hardly ever good for a book, but in this case it works.
Profile Image for Wes Hoskins.
1 review2 followers
March 8, 2011
Great book! Written in the postmodern style, but still very fresh and even inspiring considering the subject matter. It has very much changed the way I look at this consumer culture, in which we have no substantial ties to anything. Physically or cognitively.
Profile Image for Ogross.
192 reviews
July 23, 2008
I just wasn't interested enough in the author's self centered ramblings.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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