Latinx Literature in Transition, 1848-1992: Volume 2
Herausgeber: Alba Cutler, John; Lopez, Marissa
Latinx Literature in Transition, 1848-1992: Volume 2
Herausgeber: Alba Cutler, John; Lopez, Marissa
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Introduces scholars and students of literature to previously neglected or unknown works of literature, as well as new approaches to canonical texts. It challenges how previous generations of scholars have understood American modernity and shows the diversity of US Latinx communities and cultures.
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Introduces scholars and students of literature to previously neglected or unknown works of literature, as well as new approaches to canonical texts. It challenges how previous generations of scholars have understood American modernity and shows the diversity of US Latinx communities and cultures.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 409
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. April 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009314169
- ISBN-10: 1009314165
- Artikelnr.: 72597057
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 409
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. April 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009314169
- ISBN-10: 1009314165
- Artikelnr.: 72597057
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Part I. Space: 1. José Garcia Villa's sojourn in New Mexico: rethinking the
geographies of Latinidad Paula C. Park; 2. Latinx internationalism, French
orientalism, and a Nuyorican Morocco Sarah M. Quesada; 3. Centro America in
San Francisco: diasporic literariness at the end of the long nineteenth
century Gabriela Valenzuela; 4. Bridges, backs, and barrios: radical women
of color feminisms and the critique of modern space Felice Blake; Part II.
Being: 5. Brown modernism from María Cristina Mena to Gloria Anzaldúa Renee
Hudson; 6. The Spanish-indigenous binary and anti-Blackness as literary
inheritance Sheila M. Contreras; 7. The camaraderie of influence:
intersectional trauma in Down These Mean Streets Trent Masiki; 8. Spiritual
service: rereading religion and labor in ... y no se lo tragó la tierra and
Face of an Angel Marcela Di Blasi; Part III. Time: 9. Death and afterlives
of the silver dollar café in Chicanx cultural production Ariana Ruíz; 10.
Passing Time: Latinx racialization, modernist satire, and the captivity
narrative Evelyn Soto; 11. Romancing Latinidad: race, resistance, and
Latinx theater history Armando García; 12. Singing apocalypse: on Corridos,
catastrophe, and the poetics of reconstitution Jonathan Leal; Part IV.
Form: 13. Entre Balas y Rugidos: translating the Leonor Villegas de Magnón
archive into a digital exhibit Melinda Mejía; 14. Modernism's workshops:
printing Latinx literary modernities in New York City Kelley Kreitz; 15.
Lyrical mobilities: William Carlos Williams and Julia de Burgos in the
Latinx grain María del Pilar Blanco; 16. Bullets, guns, and tattoos:
debility in the US Central American literature of Salomón de la Selva and
Héctor Tobar Tatiana Argüello and Andrew Ryder; Part V. Labor: 17. Seeking
Parteras in the archive: Latinx literature in transition and the labor of
labor Erin Murrah-Mandril; 18. The work of war: Latinx literature, racial
schismatics, and possible solidarities Eric A. Vázquez and Ariana Vigil;
19. Farmworker culture in literature and film, or Tomaìs Rivera's Brown
Noir Curtis Marez; 20. The specter of neoliberalism: labor, activism, and
commodity abstraction in early Chicano/a literature Carlos Gallego.
geographies of Latinidad Paula C. Park; 2. Latinx internationalism, French
orientalism, and a Nuyorican Morocco Sarah M. Quesada; 3. Centro America in
San Francisco: diasporic literariness at the end of the long nineteenth
century Gabriela Valenzuela; 4. Bridges, backs, and barrios: radical women
of color feminisms and the critique of modern space Felice Blake; Part II.
Being: 5. Brown modernism from María Cristina Mena to Gloria Anzaldúa Renee
Hudson; 6. The Spanish-indigenous binary and anti-Blackness as literary
inheritance Sheila M. Contreras; 7. The camaraderie of influence:
intersectional trauma in Down These Mean Streets Trent Masiki; 8. Spiritual
service: rereading religion and labor in ... y no se lo tragó la tierra and
Face of an Angel Marcela Di Blasi; Part III. Time: 9. Death and afterlives
of the silver dollar café in Chicanx cultural production Ariana Ruíz; 10.
Passing Time: Latinx racialization, modernist satire, and the captivity
narrative Evelyn Soto; 11. Romancing Latinidad: race, resistance, and
Latinx theater history Armando García; 12. Singing apocalypse: on Corridos,
catastrophe, and the poetics of reconstitution Jonathan Leal; Part IV.
Form: 13. Entre Balas y Rugidos: translating the Leonor Villegas de Magnón
archive into a digital exhibit Melinda Mejía; 14. Modernism's workshops:
printing Latinx literary modernities in New York City Kelley Kreitz; 15.
Lyrical mobilities: William Carlos Williams and Julia de Burgos in the
Latinx grain María del Pilar Blanco; 16. Bullets, guns, and tattoos:
debility in the US Central American literature of Salomón de la Selva and
Héctor Tobar Tatiana Argüello and Andrew Ryder; Part V. Labor: 17. Seeking
Parteras in the archive: Latinx literature in transition and the labor of
labor Erin Murrah-Mandril; 18. The work of war: Latinx literature, racial
schismatics, and possible solidarities Eric A. Vázquez and Ariana Vigil;
19. Farmworker culture in literature and film, or Tomaìs Rivera's Brown
Noir Curtis Marez; 20. The specter of neoliberalism: labor, activism, and
commodity abstraction in early Chicano/a literature Carlos Gallego.
Part I. Space: 1. José Garcia Villa's sojourn in New Mexico: rethinking the
geographies of Latinidad Paula C. Park; 2. Latinx internationalism, French
orientalism, and a Nuyorican Morocco Sarah M. Quesada; 3. Centro America in
San Francisco: diasporic literariness at the end of the long nineteenth
century Gabriela Valenzuela; 4. Bridges, backs, and barrios: radical women
of color feminisms and the critique of modern space Felice Blake; Part II.
Being: 5. Brown modernism from María Cristina Mena to Gloria Anzaldúa Renee
Hudson; 6. The Spanish-indigenous binary and anti-Blackness as literary
inheritance Sheila M. Contreras; 7. The camaraderie of influence:
intersectional trauma in Down These Mean Streets Trent Masiki; 8. Spiritual
service: rereading religion and labor in ... y no se lo tragó la tierra and
Face of an Angel Marcela Di Blasi; Part III. Time: 9. Death and afterlives
of the silver dollar café in Chicanx cultural production Ariana Ruíz; 10.
Passing Time: Latinx racialization, modernist satire, and the captivity
narrative Evelyn Soto; 11. Romancing Latinidad: race, resistance, and
Latinx theater history Armando García; 12. Singing apocalypse: on Corridos,
catastrophe, and the poetics of reconstitution Jonathan Leal; Part IV.
Form: 13. Entre Balas y Rugidos: translating the Leonor Villegas de Magnón
archive into a digital exhibit Melinda Mejía; 14. Modernism's workshops:
printing Latinx literary modernities in New York City Kelley Kreitz; 15.
Lyrical mobilities: William Carlos Williams and Julia de Burgos in the
Latinx grain María del Pilar Blanco; 16. Bullets, guns, and tattoos:
debility in the US Central American literature of Salomón de la Selva and
Héctor Tobar Tatiana Argüello and Andrew Ryder; Part V. Labor: 17. Seeking
Parteras in the archive: Latinx literature in transition and the labor of
labor Erin Murrah-Mandril; 18. The work of war: Latinx literature, racial
schismatics, and possible solidarities Eric A. Vázquez and Ariana Vigil;
19. Farmworker culture in literature and film, or Tomaìs Rivera's Brown
Noir Curtis Marez; 20. The specter of neoliberalism: labor, activism, and
commodity abstraction in early Chicano/a literature Carlos Gallego.
geographies of Latinidad Paula C. Park; 2. Latinx internationalism, French
orientalism, and a Nuyorican Morocco Sarah M. Quesada; 3. Centro America in
San Francisco: diasporic literariness at the end of the long nineteenth
century Gabriela Valenzuela; 4. Bridges, backs, and barrios: radical women
of color feminisms and the critique of modern space Felice Blake; Part II.
Being: 5. Brown modernism from María Cristina Mena to Gloria Anzaldúa Renee
Hudson; 6. The Spanish-indigenous binary and anti-Blackness as literary
inheritance Sheila M. Contreras; 7. The camaraderie of influence:
intersectional trauma in Down These Mean Streets Trent Masiki; 8. Spiritual
service: rereading religion and labor in ... y no se lo tragó la tierra and
Face of an Angel Marcela Di Blasi; Part III. Time: 9. Death and afterlives
of the silver dollar café in Chicanx cultural production Ariana Ruíz; 10.
Passing Time: Latinx racialization, modernist satire, and the captivity
narrative Evelyn Soto; 11. Romancing Latinidad: race, resistance, and
Latinx theater history Armando García; 12. Singing apocalypse: on Corridos,
catastrophe, and the poetics of reconstitution Jonathan Leal; Part IV.
Form: 13. Entre Balas y Rugidos: translating the Leonor Villegas de Magnón
archive into a digital exhibit Melinda Mejía; 14. Modernism's workshops:
printing Latinx literary modernities in New York City Kelley Kreitz; 15.
Lyrical mobilities: William Carlos Williams and Julia de Burgos in the
Latinx grain María del Pilar Blanco; 16. Bullets, guns, and tattoos:
debility in the US Central American literature of Salomón de la Selva and
Héctor Tobar Tatiana Argüello and Andrew Ryder; Part V. Labor: 17. Seeking
Parteras in the archive: Latinx literature in transition and the labor of
labor Erin Murrah-Mandril; 18. The work of war: Latinx literature, racial
schismatics, and possible solidarities Eric A. Vázquez and Ariana Vigil;
19. Farmworker culture in literature and film, or Tomaìs Rivera's Brown
Noir Curtis Marez; 20. The specter of neoliberalism: labor, activism, and
commodity abstraction in early Chicano/a literature Carlos Gallego.