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Latinx Writing Los Angeles: Nonfiction Dispatches from a Decolonial Rebellion

Current price: $45.00
Latinx Writing Los Angeles: Nonfiction Dispatches from a Decolonial Rebellion
Latinx Writing Los Angeles: Nonfiction Dispatches from a Decolonial Rebellion

Barnes and Noble

Latinx Writing Los Angeles: Nonfiction Dispatches from a Decolonial Rebellion

Current price: $45.00

Size: Hardcover

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Latinx Writing Los Angeles
offers a critical anthology of Los Angeles’s most significant English-language and Spanish-language (in translation) nonfiction writing from the city’s inception to the present. Contemporary Latinx authors, including three Pulitzer Prize winners and writers such as Harry Gamboa Jr., Guillermo Gómez-Peña, and Rubén Martínez, focus on the ways in which Latinx Los Angeles’s nonfiction narratives record the progressive racialization and subalternization of Latinxs in the southwestern United States.
While notions of racial memory, coloniality, biopolitics, internal colonialism, cultural assimilation, Mexican or pan-Latinx cultural nationalism, and transnationalism permeate this anthology, contributors advocate the idea of a contested modernity that refuses to accept mainstream cultural impositions, proposing instead alternative ways of knowing and understanding. Featuring a wide variety of voices as well as a diversity of subgenres, this collection is the first to illuminate divergent, hybrid Latinx histories and cultures. Redefining Los Angeles’s literary history and providing a new model for English, Spanish, and Latinx studies,
is an essential contribution to southwestern and borderland studies.
Ignacio López-Calvo
is a professor of literature at the University of California, Merced. He is the author or editor of numerous books, including
The Affinity of the Eye: Writing Nikkei in Peru
and
Latino Los Angeles in Film and Fiction: The Cultural Production of Social Anxiety
.
Victor Valle
is a professor emeritus of ethnic studies at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo. A former journalist for the
Los Angeles Times
, Valle earned a Pulitzer Prize in 1984 with fellow journalists. He is the author of several books, including
Latino Metropolis
City of Industry: Genealogies of Power in Southern California

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