Guant�namo and American Empire: The Humanities Respond
302Guant�namo and American Empire: The Humanities Respond
302Hardcover(1st ed. 2017)
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Overview
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9783319622675 |
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Publisher: | Springer International Publishing |
Publication date: | 01/31/2018 |
Series: | New Caribbean Studies |
Edition description: | 1st ed. 2017 |
Pages: | 302 |
Product dimensions: | 5.83(w) x 8.27(h) x (d) |
About the Author
Jessica Adams is Assistant Professor of English and a member of the General Studies faculty at the University of Puerto Rico’s Río Piedras Campus. Her previous publications include Wounds of Returning: Race, Memory, and Property on the Post-Slavery Plantation.
Table of Contents
1. Finding Guantánamo: Freedom, Paradox, and Poetry - Don E. Walicek and Jessica Adams.- 2. “The Amen Temple of Empire - Diana Murtaugh Coleman.- 3. Responding to Erasure - Don E. Walicek.- 4. The Many Bodies of Mos Def: Notes for an Unremarkable Poem on Failure” - Guillermo Rebollo Gil.- 5. Storytelling and Truth-telling: Testimonial Narratives in The Road to Guantánamo and Guantánamo: ‘Honor Bound to Defend to Freedom’- A. Naomi Paik.- 6. Guantánamo and Community: Visual Approaches to the Naval Base - Esther Whitfield.- 7. Ana Luz García Calzada’s “Breathing Room” and “Kites” (fiction) with an introduction by the author, translated by Jessica Adams, Sean Manning, and Don E. Walicek.- 8. José Sánchez Guerra’s “Guantánamo: In the Eye of the Hurricane;” translated by Andrew Hurley.- 9. Where’s Guantánamo in Granma? Competing Discourses on Detention and Terrorism - Jana Lipman.- 10. Poetic Imaginings of the Real Guantánamo (No, Not the Base) - Laurie Frederik.- 11. Poetry and the Enemy’s Arrows: An Interview with José Ramón Sánchez Leyva - José Ramón Sánchez Leyva and Don. E. Walicek, translated by Eduardo Rodríguez Santiago.- 12. Selected poetry- José Ramón Sánchez Leyva, with translations by Jessica Adams and Don E. Walicek.-
What People are Saying About This
“This is a very satisfying collection for those of us who default to thinking of Guantánamo as just a carceral space. Full of provocative forays into history, criticism, poetry, and intertextual analysis, the book reveals some of the extraordinary cultural context in which our extralegal prison resides. The pieces remind me of the waves described by my clients in their poetry from the prison—insistent, mesmerizing, strange. Their effect is cumulative, and begin to make Guantánamo an intellectually more visible place.” (Mark Falkoff, Professor of Law at Northern Illinois University, USA)
“Even as the post-9/11 war on terror has shifted critiques of U.S. foreign policy away from the Americas, Guantánamo and American Empire reminds us of the ongoing centrality of the Caribbean to understanding the past and present of U.S. imperialism. The book offers important and original perspectives from scholars and artists in the United States, Cuba, and other parts of the Caribbean. The result isa powerful portrait of how asylum seekers and refugees, enemy combatants and those labeled as terrorists, and even everyday Caribbean people, all become the enemies of the state that Guantánamo exists to contain and exclude. Focusing on Guantánamo shows how violence and subjugation remain at the center of U.S. Empire.” (Raphael Dalleo, author of American Imperialism's Undead: The Occupation of Haiti and the Rise of Caribbean Anticolonialism, 2016, USA)
“I will hereafter think and feel differently (and more deeply) on hearing that sonorous and evocative name, "Guantánamo," thanks to reading this book. This engagingly varied volume combines genres of historical and anthropological analysis, media and cultural studies, testimonial, polemic, poetry and interview to shine the bright light of nuance on a subject so obscured by dense layers of propaganda and symbolic invocation as to have almost entirely disappeared from view as an actual place. In illuminating the many uses andabuses of Guantánamo through close and clear-eyed attention to lived experiences as well as the historical record, it offers itself as an excellent example of the power of advocacy inherent in Humanities research, its capacity to intervene in radical and distinctive ways in political debates ... .” (Ian Craig, Senior Lecturer in Spanish, University of the West Indies at Cave Hill, Barbados)