"A splendid and hard-hitting book that exposes the campaigns by some governments to urge their citizens to work overseas, a key and virtually unnoticed aspect of economic globalization."
~Karen Brodkin, author of How Jews Became White Folks and What That Says About Race in America
"Marketing Dreams, Manufacturing Heroes brings the intricate workings of the Philippine state in brokering transnational migration into sharp critical relief. Anna Romina Guevarra offers an exemplary piece of scholarship that cuts across various scales of complexities and levels of analyses which will define the contours of future debates and research agendas on migration."
~Martin F. Manalansan IV, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
"Guevarra's carefully researched, richly textured ethnographic study provides a compelling analysis of the employment agencies that recruit, mold, and market Filipina nurses and domestic workers for export as 'model workers' to the United States and around the globe. Marketing Dreams, Manufacturing Heroes offers a valuable contribution to the literature on migration as well as that on carework."
~Ruth Milkman, author of L.A. Story
"An accessible and clearly written book that contains important empirical findings and lucid observations about the social discourses and practices of labor brokerage. Anna Guevarra contributes to a better understanding of key actors in transnational migration and the cultural and ideological underpinnings of a major part of the Filipino export-oriented care service economy."
~American Journal of Sociology
"Marketing Dreams, Manufacturing Heroes offers a comprehensive account of the Philippine state's role as a labor broker. This book strives to envision new ways we might address global inequalities by tapping into the shadow side of global migration—the collective power offered by Filipino migrants' repressed feelings, frustrated dreams, and personal discontents."
~Signs
"Marketing Dreams, Manufacturing Heroes is a highly original and well-researched book that makes major significant contributions to the scholarly literature on contemporary international labor migration."
~Contemporary Sociology
"Guevarra's take on the messy and often contradictory ways that all actors - the state, labor agencies, and workers - internalize and function with ideologies of labor brokerage takes us deep into the micro-processes of migration ... A calculated and forceful critique against the systems of capitalism that broker labor and commodify people."
~Critical Sociology