"Brown-Glaude's work on the informal economy combines with a deep ethnography of working women in Jamaican culture. We see and feel these market women's presence--their race and gender consciousness, their navigation within both the local and the global marketplace, their sexuality, their laboring selves, their often forceful agency, their very bodies. Few other works are so successful at 'grounding' intersectionality. Higglers in Kingston is highly recommended for courses in gender studies, race and ethnicity, or global studies!"
--Howard Winant, University of California–Santa Barbara— -
"Brown-Glaude's well-written, jargon-free study offers a refreshing, long-overdue discussion of the ethnographer's embodied presence--her own race, class, and gender, in this case--on the research process and the information gathered. Highly recommended."
--Choice— -
"Brown-Glaude's work on the informal economy combines with a deep ethnography of working women in Jamaican culture. We see and feel these market women's presence--their race and gender consciousness, their navigation within both the local and the global marketplace, their sexuality, their laboring selves, their often forceful agency, their very bodies. Few other works are so successful at 'grounding' intersectionality. Higglers in Kingston is highly recommended for courses in gender studies, race and ethnicity, or global studies!"
--Howard Winant, University of California–Santa Barbara— -
"Brown-Glaude's well-written, jargon-free study offers a refreshing, long-overdue discussion of the ethnographer's embodied presence--her own race, class, and gender, in this case--on the research process and the information gathered. Highly recommended."
--Choice— -