Mayan Drifter

Mayan Drifter
Title Mayan Drifter PDF eBook
Author Juan Felipe Herrera
Publisher Temple University Press
Pages 294
Release 1997
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 9781566394826

Download Mayan Drifter Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In a variety of narrative voices, poems, and a play, set at different times in history, the author presents a journey to the Maya Lowlands of Chiapas on a quest for his Indio heritage and a vision of the multicultured identity emerging in America, envisioning the disappearance of borders and evoking a fluid American self that needs no fixed identity or location.

Juan Felipe Herrera

Juan Felipe Herrera
Title Juan Felipe Herrera PDF eBook
Author Francisco A. Lomelí
Publisher University of Arizona Press
Pages 473
Release 2023-06-20
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0816549745

Download Juan Felipe Herrera Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book is a wide-ranging collection of critical approaches on the highly accomplished poet Juan Felipe Herrera, who transcends ethnic and mainstream poetics. The chapters in this book expertly demonstrate the author's versatility, resourcefulness, innovations, and infinite creativity.

Spilling the Beans in Chicanolandia

Spilling the Beans in Chicanolandia
Title Spilling the Beans in Chicanolandia PDF eBook
Author Frederick Luis Aldama
Publisher University of Texas Press
Pages 305
Release 2010-01-01
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 029278435X

Download Spilling the Beans in Chicanolandia Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Since the 1980s, a prolific "second wave" of Chicano/a writers and artists has tremendously expanded the range of genres and subject matter in Chicano/a literature and art. Building on the pioneering work of their predecessors, whose artistic creations were often tied to political activism and the civil rights struggle, today's Chicano/a writers and artists feel free to focus as much on the aesthetic quality of their work as on its social content. They use novels, short stories, poetry, drama, documentary films, and comic books to shape the raw materials of life into art objects that cause us to participate empathetically in an increasingly complex Chicano/a identity and experience. This book presents far-ranging interviews with twenty-one "second wave" Chicano/a poets, fiction writers, dramatists, documentary filmmakers, and playwrights. Some are mainstream, widely recognized creators, while others work from the margins because of their sexual orientations or their controversial positions. Frederick Luis Aldama draws out the artists and authors on both the aesthetic and the sociopolitical concerns that animate their work. Their conversations delve into such areas as how the artists' or writers' life experiences have molded their work, why they choose to work in certain genres and how they have transformed them, what it means to be Chicano/a in today's pluralistic society, and how Chicano/a identity influences and is influenced by contact with ethnic and racial identities from around the world.

Broken Souths

Broken Souths
Title Broken Souths PDF eBook
Author Michael Dowdy
Publisher University of Arizona Press
Pages 297
Release 2013-11-21
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0816599572

Download Broken Souths Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Broken Souths offers the first in-depth study of the diverse field of contemporary Latina/o poetry. Its innovative angle of approach puts Latina/o and Latin American poets into sustained conversation in original and rewarding ways. In addition, author Michael Dowdy presents ecocritical readings that foreground the environmental dimensions of current Latina/o poetics. Dowdy argues that a transnational Latina/o imaginary has emerged in response to neoliberalism—the free-market philosophy that underpins what many in the northern hemisphere refer to as “globalization.” His work examines how poets represent the places that have been “broken” by globalization’s political, economic, and environmental upheavals. Broken Souths locates the roots of the new imaginary in 1968, when the Mexican student movement crested and the Chicano and Nuyorican movements emerged in the United States. It theorizes that Latina/o poetics negotiates tensions between the late 1960s’ oppositional, collective identities and the present day’s radical individualisms and discourses of assimilation, including the “post-colonial,” “post-national,” and “post-revolutionary.” Dowdy is particularly interested in how Latina/o poetics reframes debates in cultural studies and critical geography on the relation between place, space, and nature. Broken Souths features discussions of Latina/o writers such as Victor Hernández Cruz, Martín Espada, Juan Felipe Herrera, Guillermo Verdecchia, Marcos McPeek Villatoro, Maurice Kilwein Guevara, Judith Ortiz Cofer, Jack Agüeros, Marjorie Agosín, Valerie Martínez, and Ariel Dorfman, alongside discussions of influential Latin American writers, including Roberto Bolaño, Ernesto Cardenal, David Huerta, José Emilio Pacheco, and Raúl Zurita.

Imagined Transnationalism

Imagined Transnationalism
Title Imagined Transnationalism PDF eBook
Author K. Concannon
Publisher Springer
Pages 265
Release 2009-11-09
Genre Art
ISBN 0230103324

Download Imagined Transnationalism Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

With its focus on Latina/o communities in the United States, this collection of essays identifies and investigates the salient narrative and aesthetic strategies with which an individual or a collective represents transnational experiences and identities in literary and cultural texts.

They Call You Back

They Call You Back
Title They Call You Back PDF eBook
Author Tim Z. Hernandez
Publisher University of Arizona Press
Pages 273
Release 2024
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0816553610

Download They Call You Back Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

They Call You Back is a memoir about the investigations that have shaped the greater part of author Tim Z. Hernandez's life. It is a calling that blurs the line between historical recovery, obsession, and justice.

What Is a Western?

What Is a Western?
Title What Is a Western? PDF eBook
Author Josh Garrett-Davis
Publisher University of Oklahoma Press
Pages 193
Release 2019-09-26
Genre History
ISBN 080616588X

Download What Is a Western? Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

There’s “western,” and then there’s “Western”—and where history becomes myth is an evocative question, one of several questions posed by Josh Garrett-Davis in What Is a Western? Region, Genre, Imagination. Part cultural criticism, part history, and wholly entertaining, this series of essays on specific films, books, music, and other cultural texts brings a fresh perspective to long-studied topics. Under Garrett-Davis’s careful observation, cultural objects such as films and literature, art and artifacts, and icons and oddities occupy the terrain of where the West as region meets the Western genre. One crucial through line in the collection is the relationship of regional “western” works to genre “Western” works, and the ways those two categories cannot be cleanly distinguished—most work about the West is tinted by the Western genre, and Westerns depend on the region for their status and power. Garrett-Davis also seeks to answer the question “What is a Western now?” To do so, he brings the Western into dialogue with other frameworks of the “imagined West” such as Indigenous perspectives, the borderlands, and environmental thinking. The book’s mosaic of subject matter includes new perspectives on the classic musical film Oklahoma!, a consideration of Native activism at Standing Rock, and surprises like Pee-wee’s Big Adventure and Dr. Seuss’s The Lorax. The book is influenced by the borderlands theory of Gloria Anzaldúa and the work of the indie rock band Calexico, as well as the author’s own discipline of western cultural history. Richly illustrated, primarily from the collection of the Autry Museum of the American West, Josh Garrett-Davis’s work is as visually interesting as it is enlightening, asking readers to consider the American West in new ways.