Walk the Barrio: The Streets of Twenty-First-Century Transnational Latinx Literature

Walk the Barrio: The Streets of Twenty-First-Century Transnational Latinx Literature

by Cristina Rodriguez
Walk the Barrio: The Streets of Twenty-First-Century Transnational Latinx Literature

Walk the Barrio: The Streets of Twenty-First-Century Transnational Latinx Literature

by Cristina Rodriguez

Paperback

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Overview

Immigrant communities evince particular and deep relationship to place. Building on this self-evident premise, Walk the Barrio adds the less obvious claim that to write about place you must experience place. Thus, in this book about immigrants, writing, and place, Cristina Rodriguez walks neighborhood streets, talks to immigrants, interviews authors, and puts herself physically in the spaces that she seeks to understand.

The word barrio first entered the English lexicon in 1833 and has since become a commonplace not only of American speech but of our literary imagination. Indeed, what draws Rodriguez to the barrios of Los Angeles, New York, Miami, and others is the work of literature that was fueled and inspired by those neighborhoods. Walk the Barrio explores the ways in which authors William Archila, Richard Blanco, Angie Cruz, Junot Díaz, Salvador Plascencia, Héctor Tobar, and Helena María Viramontes use their U.S. hometowns as both setting and stylistic inspiration.

Asking how these writers innovate upon or break the rules of genre to render in words an embodied experience of the barrio, Rodriguez considers, for example, how the spatial map of New Brunswick impacts the mobility of Díaz’s female characters, or how graffiti influences the aesthetics of Viramontes’s novels. By mapping each text’s fictional setting upon the actual spaces it references in what she calls "barriographies," Rodriguez reveals connections between place, narrative form, and migrancy.

This first-person, interdisciplinary approach presents an innovative model for literary studies as it sheds important light on the ways in which transnationalism transforms the culture of each Latinx barrio, effecting shifts in gender roles, the construction of the family, definitions of social normativity, and racial, ethnic, national, and linguistic identifications.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813948065
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Publication date: 06/15/2022
Series: Cultural Frames, Framing Culture
Pages: 314
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.25(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Cristina Rodriguez is Associate Professor of English at Providence College.

Table of Contents

Introduction: My Hometown: Silver Spring and the Method of Walk the Barrio
Part I: Mexican-American East Los Angeles
1. The El Monte Aesthetic in Salvador Plascencia's The People of Paper
2. "Earthquakes or earthmovers": The East L.A. Barrio and Helena María Viramontes' Their Dogs Came With Them
Part II: Central American Downtown Los Angeles
3. The War for Space in Héctor Tobar's The Tattooed Soldier
4. "The Blackouts of a Tiny Country": The Art of William Archila's Salvadoran Exile
Part III: Dominican New York City
5. "No Promises Can Survive that Sea": This is How You Lose Her's Diasporic Identity
6. "Washington Heights Is Like a Prison Sentence": Soledad's Female Surveillance
Part IV: Cuban Miami
7. "Why Don't I Got a Street?": Little Havana in Richard Blanco's Queer Cuban-American Bildungsroman
Conclusion: Your Hometown and Other Barriographies

What People are Saying About This

Elena Machado Sáez

Wonderfully engaging and unique. Rodriguez’s engrossing first-person voice and intriguing focus on the local offer new historical contexts that challenge prior interpretations of U.S. Latinx literature.

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