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Rating:  Summary: A Wonderful Insight! Review: After having spent a year in Costa Rica as an exchange student, I'm always looking for good reads about the Ticos and their culture. By pure chance I ended up at Barnes and Nobles one day and Richard Biesanz was doing a book signing for the collaborative book release. I found the book to be wonderfully insightful. Even if you aren't familiar with the Ticos you will find the book to be very intersting. The Biesanz let you look into all aspects of the life that the Costa Ricans lead, from the type of economy they have right down to their everyday lifestyle. From reading the book you will walk away with a better understanding of what makes the Ticos so special, and it will make you want to travel to Costa Rica and see it for yourself! It is a job well done! The Biesanz have a deep understanding and enjoyment of this culture and people, and you will feel that as you read the book.
Rating:  Summary: almost as good as my favorite CR book! Review: Heading for Costa Rica? Take The Ticos along with a guidebook. The Ticos is a fascinating and beautifully written account of Costa Rica, past and present. The authors bring to bear on the subject their more than half-century of residence in the country, as well as their formidable anthropological expertise. As a permanent resident of Costa Rica, I compared my own observations and experiences with those of the Bizantzs. For every topic examined - community, health care, religion, family, education and so forth, the authors' descriptions were consistent with my own, and their keen analyses deepened my understanding of the country I have adopted as my own. Beyond what The Ticos tells us about Costa Rica, this book is also extremely valuable for its examination of the effects of structural adjustment economic policies imposed on this country by the international financial institutions and by the United States (through bilateral agreements) as conditions for loans. These policies are having the same deleterious effects worldwide on developing countries. Normally, discussions of the impact of structural adjustment policies are abstract and academic. The Ticos, in contrast, provides us with a concrete and specific assessment of the "fall out" institution by institution, free of technical jargon. For foreign residents of Costa Rica (and prospective residents) I would say this book is a "must". But even short-term tourists will benefit from reading it.
Rating:  Summary: Heading for Costa Rica? Take this book Review: Heading for Costa Rica? Take The Ticos along with a guidebook. The Ticos is a fascinating and beautifully written account of Costa Rica, past and present. The authors bring to bear on the subject their more than half-century of residence in the country, as well as their formidable anthropological expertise. As a permanent resident of Costa Rica, I compared my own observations and experiences with those of the Bizantzs. For every topic examined - community, health care, religion, family, education and so forth, the authors' descriptions were consistent with my own, and their keen analyses deepened my understanding of the country I have adopted as my own. Beyond what The Ticos tells us about Costa Rica, this book is also extremely valuable for its examination of the effects of structural adjustment economic policies imposed on this country by the international financial institutions and by the United States (through bilateral agreements) as conditions for loans. These policies are having the same deleterious effects worldwide on developing countries. Normally, discussions of the impact of structural adjustment policies are abstract and academic. The Ticos, in contrast, provides us with a concrete and specific assessment of the "fall out" institution by institution, free of technical jargon. For foreign residents of Costa Rica (and prospective residents) I would say this book is a "must". But even short-term tourists will benefit from reading it.
Rating:  Summary: Costa Rica History and Society Review: I purchased this book at the airport in San Jose, Costa Rica at the end of a two week trip and read the book cover to cover on the way home to Los Angeles. It answered all my questions about why this is such a unique country. The book explained for instance why the town square was empty at San Isidro last Sunday: the World Cup soccer match was on TV. I would recomment this book to anyone who is planning to travel to Costa Rica or anyone who has completed a trip.
Rating:  Summary: Costa Rica History and Society Review: I purchased this book at the airport in San Jose, Costa Rica at the end of a two week trip and read the book cover to cover on the way home to Los Angeles. It answered all my questions about why this is such a unique country. The book explained for instance why the town square was empty at San Isidro last Sunday: the World Cup soccer match was on TV. I would recomment this book to anyone who is planning to travel to Costa Rica or anyone who has completed a trip.
Rating:  Summary: An anthropological perspective on the Costa Rican people. Review: In this description of Latin America's reputedly most progressive country, published fifty years after it disbanded its army, we trace Costa Rica's transformation since Columbus' 1502 "discovery". Once the poorest and most neglected of Spain's American colonies, its literacy, infant mortality, and electoral democracy are now among the most favorable in the region. It is a locus both of foreign-owned textile sweatshops and of a huge Intel microchip plant, a mecca for birdwatchers and surfers as well as for swindlers and drug smugglers, destitute Nicaraguans and North American retirees. We examine Ticos' (Costa Ricans') core values, economy, government, class and ethnic relations, family structure, gender roles, education, religion, housing, medical beliefs and practices, soccer mania, and many other facets of their society and culture. We describe the life cycle from conception to burial, as well as the texture of daily life in each social class. THE TICOS, a product of decades of participant observation, interviews, and scholarship, looks at Costa Rica from many perspectives. We note, for example, the reasons for the growth of a government bureaucracy that by l978 employed as many as one in every four workers--as well as the ways in which Costa Ricans joke about it and maneuver through it, and the pressures from the World Bank and other lenders to drastically reduce it in an attempt to reshape the country to the interests of multinational investors. We describe cultural influences on sexual behavior as well as the role of urban growth in popularizing sterilization and abortion. Likewise, we examine both the government's relations with the Roman Catholic church--the country's official church--and the reasons so many Catholics boast "I am not a fanatic", or have joined evangelical Protestant sects since the l970s. The first Biesanz book about Costa Rica (COSTA RICAN LIFE, l944) is considered a classic. The University of Costa Rica has long used our l979 ethnography, LOS COSTARRICENSES, as a text in its required course, The National Reality. Several U.S. universities have used our l982 book, THE COSTA RICANS, in courses on Central America; many scholars, travellers, and foreign residents have found its insights both entertaining and useful. (A review in CHOICE called it "a very sensitive portrayal of Tico society and culture.") We hope that readers of THE TICOS, too, will enjoy our latest description of this unique country and its people
Rating:  Summary: almost as good as my favorite CR book! Review: While Biesanz & company have produced a lucid and info-packed "insider's" book on Costa Rica, I still find that it comes in second to my favorite CR book, "Costa Rica: The Last Country The Gods Made": a hybrid of a coffee-table book, a social/ politcial discussion and a geological history in a series of essays and sidebars. The Last Country The Gods Made truly does live up to it's scope of topics. Aside from geology and social history, it covers the political and economic history of the country and emphasizes its liberal reformist tradition as exceptional in Central America. I just like the writing better because the subjects are leavened by humor and, at times, almost poetical diction. Also, frankly, the photos are better! And the prices are comparable so, maybe check them both out! But if you're on a budget, just buy The Last Country.
Rating:  Summary: almost as good as my favorite CR book! Review: While Biesanz & company have produced a lucid and info-packed "insider's" book on Costa Rica, I still find that it comes in second to my favorite CR book, "Costa Rica: The Last Country The Gods Made": a hybrid of a coffee-table book, a social/ politcial discussion and a geological history in a series of essays and sidebars. The Last Country The Gods Made truly does live up to it's scope of topics. Aside from geology and social history, it covers the political and economic history of the country and emphasizes its liberal reformist tradition as exceptional in Central America. I just like the writing better because the subjects are leavened by humor and, at times, almost poetical diction. Also, frankly, the photos are better! And the prices are comparable so, maybe check them both out! But if you're on a budget, just buy The Last Country.
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