Description
Through a transformative interdisciplinary lens, this book studies the ultra-contemporary chronicles of Carlos Monsivais, the poetry of Carmen Boullosa and Luis Felipe Fabre, and the novels of Enrique Serna, Hector de Mauleon, Monica Lavin, and Pablo Soler Frost, among others. The book also pays close attention to a good sample of recent children's literature that revisit Mexico's colonia. It includes the transatlantic perspective of Spanish novelist Inma Chacon, and a detailed analysis of the strategies employed by Laura Esquivel in the creation of a best seller. Other chapters are devoted to the study of transnational film productions, a play by Flavio Gonzalez Mello, and a set of novels set in the nineteenth-century colonia that problematize static notions of both personal and national identity within specific cultural palimpsests. Taken together, these incisive readings open broader conversations about Mexican coloniality as it continues well into the twenty-first century.
About the Author
Oswaldo Estrada is an associate professor of Latin American literature at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and editor of the journal Romance Notes. He has published numerous articles and book chapters on colonial and contemporary Mexican literature.
Anna M. Nogar is an assistant professor at the University of New Mexico, where she specializes in colonial Mexican and Mexican American literature and culture.
Book Information
ISBN 9780816531080
Author Oswaldo Estrada
Format Hardback
Page Count 312
Imprint University of Arizona Press
Publisher University of Arizona Press
Weight(grams) 589g