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Syndrome probes the history and rhetoric by which Puerto Rico became an "unincorporated territory" and its peoples pathologized subjects. In a reckoning with the world's oldest colony and the only nationality to have a psychological disorder named after it, this is a poetry that lyrically evokes a counter-diagnosis.

Produktbeschreibung
Syndrome probes the history and rhetoric by which Puerto Rico became an "unincorporated territory" and its peoples pathologized subjects. In a reckoning with the world's oldest colony and the only nationality to have a psychological disorder named after it, this is a poetry that lyrically evokes a counter-diagnosis.
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Autorenporträt
Born in Puerto Rico and raised in Tampa, Florida, Éric Morales-Franceschini is a former construction worker, US Army veteran, and community college graduate who now holds a PhD in Rhetoric from UC, Berkeley and is Associate Professor of English and Latin American Studies at the University of Georgia. He is the author of Autopsy of a Fall (Newfound, 2021), winner of the 2020 Gloria Anzaldúa Poetry Prize, and The Epic of Cuba Libre The Mambí, Mythopoetics, and Liberation (University of Virginia Press, 2022), winner of the MLA's 2023 Katherine Singer Kovacs Prize and the 2023 Cultural Studies Association First Book Award. A recipient of fellowships from the Woodrow Wilson and Ford foundations, his essays and poetry have been published in a variety of scholarly and literary venues, including Global South Studies, Journal of Postcolonial Writing, Age of Revolutions, Small Axe, Acentos Review, Kweli, Muzzle, AGNI, and Boston Review. Syndrome is his debut full-length collection.