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The Near Northwest Side Story: Migration, Displacement, and Puerto Rican Families

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In The Near Northwest Side Story, Gina M. Pérez offers an intimate and unvarnished portrait of Puerto Rican life in Chicago and San Sebastian, Puerto Rico―two places connected by a long history of circulating people, ideas, goods, and information. Pérez's masterful blend of history and ethnography explores the multiple and gendered reasons for migration, why people maintain transnational connections with distant communities, and how poor and working-class Puerto Ricans work to build meaningful communities.

Pérez traces the changing ways that Puerto Ricans have experienced poverty, displacement, and discrimination and illustrates how they imagine and build extended families and dense social networks that link San Sebastian to barrios in Chicago. She includes an incisive analysis of the role of the state in shaping migration through such projects as the Chardon Plan, Operation Bootstrap, and the Chicago Experiment. The Near Northwest Side Story provides a unique window on the many strategies people use to resist the negative consequences of globalization, economic development, and gentrification.

292 pages, Paperback

First published September 4, 2004

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Gina Perez

3 books

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Lorna.
1 review2 followers
May 13, 2008
my sister's book, so i am biased, but she is brilliant. the book problematizes our gendered assumptions about migration and transmigration within the Puerto Rican diaspora and deals thoughtfully with the tensions between place/space and belonging. in particular, the text deals with the raced and gendered discourses of movement and place-making and reveals a complicated mapping of the interconnectedness of Puerto Rican communities both on the mainland and the island.
Profile Image for J-kwon Stanley.
68 reviews3 followers
February 27, 2024
Oh man my brain hurts after reading this. I read this while teaching in the Near Northwest side. It's interesting reading about how wicker park is fast gentrifying when now it basically couldn't be anymore gentrified.

I am part of this gentrification myself. I lived in Logan Square a number of years in the 2010s and now am living in Humboldt and teaching in schools here. I picked this book up to understand the area and Chicago Puerto Ricans more. It was very informative and good information to know as an educator!

When I got it, I wasn't expecting it to be so academic and sociological, but I did my best to rise to the occasion and I quite enjoyed the ride.
34 reviews1 follower
Want to read
March 12, 2008
really looking forward to reading this...the title grabbed me (love "West Side Story"!) and the reviews seemed encouraging... adding to my anthro spree
Profile Image for Candace.
93 reviews2 followers
Read
April 24, 2009
An ethnography I had to read for anthropology.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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