Writing the Goodlife: Mexican American Literature and the Environment

Writing the Goodlife: Mexican American Literature and the Environment

by Priscilla Solis Ybarra
Writing the Goodlife: Mexican American Literature and the Environment

Writing the Goodlife: Mexican American Literature and the Environment

by Priscilla Solis Ybarra

eBook

$29.95 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

Winner of the Western Literature Association’s 2017 Thomas J. Lyon Book Award in Western American Literary and Cultural Studies
  Mexican American literature brings a much-needed approach to the increasingly urgent challenges of climate change and environmental injustice. Although current environmental studies work to develop new concepts, Writing the Goodlife looks to long-established traditions of thought that have existed in Mexican American literary history for the past century and a half. During that time period, Mexican American writing consistently shifts the focus from the environmentally destructive settler values of individualism, domination, and excess toward the more beneficial refrains of community, non-possessiveness, and humility. The decolonial approaches found in these writings provide rich examples of mutually respectful relations between humans and nature, an approach that Priscilla Solis Ybarra calls “goodlife” writing.

Goodlife writing has existed for at least the past century, Ybarra contends, but Chicana/o literary history’s emphasis on justice and civil rights eclipsed this tradition and hidden it from the general public’s view. Likewise, in ecocriticism, the voices of people of color most often appear in deliberations about environmental justice. The quiet power of goodlife writing certainly challenges injustice, to be sure, but it also brings to light the decolonial environmentalism heretofore obscured in both Chicana/o literary history and environmental literary studies.

Ybarra’s book takes on two of today’s most discussed topics—the worsening environmental crisis and the rising Latino population in the United States—and puts them in literary-historical context from the U.S.-Mexico War up to today’s controversial policies regarding climate change, immigration, and ethnic studies. This book uncovers 150 years’ worth of Mexican American and Chicana/o knowledge and practices that inspire hope in the face of some of today’s biggest challenges.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780816533831
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Publication date: 05/12/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 264
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Priscilla Solis Ybarra is an assistant professor of Latina/o literature in the Department of English at the University of North Texas.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface: The Making of a Chicana Ecocritic
Acknowledgments

Introduction: Defining Mexican American Goodlife Writing
1 Epistemological Hierarchy and the Environment: Erasure of Mexican American Knowledge in Three Nineteenth-Century Novels
2 The Coloniality of Being and the Land: Identity in Early Twentieth-Century Goodlife Writing
3 “La Santa Tierra”: Chicana/o Writers Transcending Possession in the Late Twentieth Century
4 Active Subjectivity in Migrant Farmworker Fiction: Rejecting Alienation from the Land
5 Ecology and Chicana/o Cultural Nationalism: Humility Before Death in Cherríe Moraga’s Millennial Writings
Conclusion: Decolonized Environmentalisms for the Twenty-First Century

Notes
Works Cited
Index
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews