Description
Saldivar is one of the founders of border studies and one of the most respected senior scholars in American Studies. In this work he introduces the term "trans-Americanity" as a frame for thinking more hemispherically within a global, world-systems frame. There have been previous attempts at thinking the Americas as a whole, but often they have brought Latin America into a North American context. Saldivar wants to decenter the U.S. and national narratives more generally, and does so here in a series of readings which draw on literatures and events throughout the hemisphere.
About the Author
Jose David Saldivar is Professor of Comparative Literature and Chair and Director of the Undergraduate Program in Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity at Stanford University. His books include Border Matters: Remapping American Cultural Studies, as well as The Dialectics of Our America: Genealogy, Cultural Critique, and Literary History and Criticism in the Borderlands: Studies in Chicano Literature, Culture, and Ideology (co-edited with Hector Calderon), both also published by Duke University Press.
Reviews
"Trans-Americanity is a magnificent, visionary book. I cannot think of another scholar working today who has helped to instantiate new fields and new lines of inquiry in the manner of Jose David Saldivar. He is an unusually generous and curious scholar, one who is perfectly willing to rethink earlier assumptions, appreciate the insights of his critics, and read broadly across disciplines. These strengths contribute to what I believe will be an extremely influential text, one that will be widely taught and carefully reviewed."-Mary Pat Brady, author of Extinct Lands, Temporal Geographies: Chicana Literature and the Urgency of Space
"Intent on discerning the common concerns of subaltern studies, global coloniality, and transmodernity, Jose David Saldivar examines persistent motifs and literary themes in the imaginative literature of Greater Mexico and South Asia. Individually and collectively, the minoritized writings that he discusses articulate new epistemological grounds for critiquing a transmodern world governed by global capitalism and new forms of coloniality. Saldivar advocates an 'Americanity' that opens up the idea of America to contexts well beyond the United States, Latin America, and the Western Hemisphere."-Donald E. Pease, author of The New American Exceptionalism
"Saldivar is one of the boldest and most important scholars in American Studies today. Like few others, he engages what Marti calls Nuestra America, and for that he should be congratulated. Trans-Americanity is well worth reading." -- Paul B. Wickelson * Rocky Mountain Review *
"Saldivar is one of the more interesting contemporary scholars in the field of American Studies. . .. [A]n excitingly inventive book that is sure to generate new avenues of scholarly inquiry." -- Seth Horton * Journal of American Culture *
"Trans-Americanity is extraordinarily ambitious in its scope. . . . By providing conceptual linkages between authors and texts that are rarely read or taught together, Saldivar provides a critical map for scholars seeking to transnationalize American and US Latina/o studies." -- Julie Minich * Journal of American Studies *
"Trans-Americanity's seven chapters, useful preface, and experimental ending offer broad intellectual coverage of Latin America, South Asia, and the Americas from the nineteenth to the twenty-first centuries." -- Karen Mary Davalos * American Quarterly *
Book Information
ISBN 9780822350835
Author Jose David Saldivar
Format Paperback
Page Count 304
Imprint Duke University Press
Publisher Duke University Press
Weight(grams) 413g