This essay reads Harryette Mullen's epic poem Muse & Drudge as an innovative text of the US-Mexico borderlands by focusing on Mullen's literal and figurative transactions between multiple discourses, including Spanish, and the corresponding sets of material conditions these discourses conjure to understand how Muse & Drudge reveals the ongoing racialization and exploitation of African American women and Latinas. I identify a transaborder politics in Muse & Drudge in which shared colonial histories unite Afro-Caribbean diasporic and borderlands subjects. In Mullen's poetics, themes of separation, definition, and regulation are racial-ized concepts, deeply embedded in the violent histories of racial mixing and mestizaje that are both named ou...
This course is a study of the literature of the U.S.-Mexico border from the 1980s to the present. We...
Contemporary cultural critics have theorized the multiple aspects of location in many different wa...
Using the U.S.-Mexican border as the place of enunciation, Cantú’s autoethnobiographical novel insi...
This essay reads Harryette Mullen's epic poem, Muse & Drudge, as an innovative text of the U.S.-...
AbstractBorder Encounters: American Cultural Politics and the U.S.-Mexico BorderbyJennifer Andrea Re...
The US/Mexican border continues to be an important topic of public debate for Americans. The ways jo...
This essay addresses the poetics of Harryette Mullen, an awarded African-American female poet whose ...
This dissertation considers how the Californias have inherited two different colonial histories and ...
This article traces the workings of the border in Carlos Fuentes’ La frontera de cristal, Alejandro ...
My project focuses on Unaccompanied, a collection of poetry by Salvadoran American Javier Zamora pub...
At the Border of Subjectivity: On Literature, Space, and Subalternity critically reexamines the maki...
“The Underside of Borders: Reading Chican@ and Native American Literature at the Turn of the Twenty-...
The creative and scholarly writing of Norma Elia Cantú focuses centrally on the tensions of borders ...
This essay explores a set of poetic texts—the Transborder Immigrant Tool (TBT); Amy Sara Carroll's “...
This course is a study of the literature of the U.S.-Mexico border from the 1980s to the present. We...
This course is a study of the literature of the U.S.-Mexico border from the 1980s to the present. We...
Contemporary cultural critics have theorized the multiple aspects of location in many different wa...
Using the U.S.-Mexican border as the place of enunciation, Cantú’s autoethnobiographical novel insi...
This essay reads Harryette Mullen's epic poem, Muse & Drudge, as an innovative text of the U.S.-...
AbstractBorder Encounters: American Cultural Politics and the U.S.-Mexico BorderbyJennifer Andrea Re...
The US/Mexican border continues to be an important topic of public debate for Americans. The ways jo...
This essay addresses the poetics of Harryette Mullen, an awarded African-American female poet whose ...
This dissertation considers how the Californias have inherited two different colonial histories and ...
This article traces the workings of the border in Carlos Fuentes’ La frontera de cristal, Alejandro ...
My project focuses on Unaccompanied, a collection of poetry by Salvadoran American Javier Zamora pub...
At the Border of Subjectivity: On Literature, Space, and Subalternity critically reexamines the maki...
“The Underside of Borders: Reading Chican@ and Native American Literature at the Turn of the Twenty-...
The creative and scholarly writing of Norma Elia Cantú focuses centrally on the tensions of borders ...
This essay explores a set of poetic texts—the Transborder Immigrant Tool (TBT); Amy Sara Carroll's “...
This course is a study of the literature of the U.S.-Mexico border from the 1980s to the present. We...
This course is a study of the literature of the U.S.-Mexico border from the 1980s to the present. We...
Contemporary cultural critics have theorized the multiple aspects of location in many different wa...
Using the U.S.-Mexican border as the place of enunciation, Cantú’s autoethnobiographical novel insi...