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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars we use it as a textbook!
We teach a summer elective in Mexico for health professional students. Our 2 week in-country course focuses on learning the culture and language and health care systems of Mexico. This book is very useful because it gives a quick down and dirty synopsis of Mexican history (much longer and messier than U.S.history)that allows us, as teachers, to move into what we see as...
Published on March 1, 2001 by suzan kardong-edgren

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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating anecdotes, but needs an editor
This entry in the Culture Shock! series provides a wealth of information about Mexico, but the author's presentation is rambling and disorganized. Of course, one could take this as a metaphor for Mexico: things appear to be chaotic, but generally they can be made to work. Tips for doing business in Mexico and handling social occasions are generally well-presented. The...
Published on June 15, 1998


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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars we use it as a textbook!, March 1, 2001
By 
We teach a summer elective in Mexico for health professional students. Our 2 week in-country course focuses on learning the culture and language and health care systems of Mexico. This book is very useful because it gives a quick down and dirty synopsis of Mexican history (much longer and messier than U.S.history)that allows us, as teachers, to move into what we see as the aftermath, in the country today. It then moves onto the author's own experiences navigating the culture, with excellent tips, "to blend in" and understand what is going on around you. The details the author provides, such as going up to a stranger's house in the country, and asking "do you have any extra food today?" were true 20 years ago and are still true today. This provides the cultural context and informational detail we need, dealing with immigrants from these areas, in health care settings. It is not a guidebook. It is a hybrid...and very useful for those travelers who blaze their own paths, not the usual tourist tracks of Mexico.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Social and Cultural Mexico, March 29, 2000
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Steve (United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I read this after reading the US State Travel Dept. Info Sheet which tends to be overly conservative and makes places sound like demilitarized zones. This guide put a little reality back into it. The author gives some cultural tips mainly for the gringo (US citizen) to help mostly in social situations. Especially useful, were the tips on how to recognize a good Mexican restaurant, how to address people in social situations, and other Mexicanisms such as various commonly used slang. The author also describes regional differences and urban/rural differences you may come across. I feel this is a good guide to get a feel for the people and the place especially for the casual visitor going to the non-tourist areas of Mexico so you don't act like such a gringo. Not really a book to keep as a long-term reference to Mexico, I'd try to borrow it before buying it. The author does give minor Mexican differences in pronouncing Spanish, but I think he assumes most readers have a basis for Spanish, or will have a phrase book for this.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating anecdotes, but needs an editor, June 15, 1998
By A Customer
This entry in the Culture Shock! series provides a wealth of information about Mexico, but the author's presentation is rambling and disorganized. Of course, one could take this as a metaphor for Mexico: things appear to be chaotic, but generally they can be made to work. Tips for doing business in Mexico and handling social occasions are generally well-presented. The section on personal safety, in which the author relates his attempts to stay overnight in the worst sections of two Mexican cities to tempt fate, is instructive (he emerges unscathed) but does leave me wishing the jacket carried a photo of this fearless adventurer. (See the review of Culture Shock! Japan for general info on the series.)
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1.0 out of 5 stars Quite useless and boring information, September 20, 2011
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This review is from: Culture Shock! Mexico: A Guide to Customs & Etiquette (Paperback)
As a Mexican I bought this book expecting to read about the various social and cultural customes that make mexicans unique, as presented about different countries in other Culture Shock books..

Unlike those, I found this one full with historic data, that unless you are interested in Mexican history, would not find useful. Only Pages 101 to 110 have some information relevant to a culture shock book. The rest of the book is rather boring and with a lot of useless accounts and anecdotes.

I am sure there are other books that focus on the Cultural Difference of mexicans that would be more interesting than this.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Informative & helpful book, July 18, 2010
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This review is from: Culture Shock! Mexico: A Guide to Customs & Etiquette (Paperback)
This book introduces a variety of Mexican cultural facets and also includes a brief history of the country. The only thing lacking is a list or glossary of common Mexican expressions or slang.
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6 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars What a Shock, November 23, 1999
Not recommended. The biggest shock was the author's pedantry. The first third of the book is an obscure treatment of history which assumes too much knowledge on the part of the reader. The book needs a glossary with the pronunciation of unusual spanish words, names, and places. I found myself constantly stumbling over them.
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Culture Shock! Mexico: A Guide to Customs & Etiquette
Culture Shock! Mexico: A Guide to Customs & Etiquette by Mark Cramer (Paperback - August 1, 2002)
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