This dissertation offers a bilingual analysis of the transnational co-formation of U.S. and Mexican cultural nationalisms in the 1920s and 1930s, and investigates the intra-hemispheric networks of modernist practice and exchange in the Americas. Drawing on a wide variety of materials (culturalist essays, poems, paintings, journals, etc.) from such diverse writers and artists such as Waldo Frank, Stuart Chase, John Dos Passos, Thomas Hart Benton, Alfonso Reyes, José Enrique Rodó, Diego Rivera, and Salvador Novo (among others), this project reconstructs the polydirectional process of cultural collaboration through which the gendered and racialized vocabulary of U.S. and Mexican nationality was produced, transacted, and sometimes contested. ...
This dissertation theorizes an aesthetics of extraction in the modernist dialogue between U.S. and M...
My dissertation explores the notions lyric, poetry, modernity, and America. I argue that the idea of...
William Carlos Williams wrote, “The classic is the local fully realized, words marked by a place.” T...
This dissertation offers a bilingual analysis of the transnational co-formation of U.S. and Mexican ...
In this essay, I will explore a variety of cultural productions by Mexican American writers and arti...
This study examines how modernist authors in the 1920s and early 1930s used representations of Latin...
At the end of the nineteenth century several writers in Mexico and other countries in Spanish Americ...
Between 1933 and 1945, Americans redefined their cultural identity within a hemispheric context and ...
<p>My dissertation, <“>Transcending Borders: The Transnational Construction of Mexicanness, 19...
Transindigenous Modernism indigenizes the study of literary modernism. It applies the term indigenis...
This dissertation, examines how rhizomatic cultural production in late twentieth-century Tijuana-San...
This dissertation brings to light a legacy of Mexican American spatial resilience that troubles Angl...
textRe-Reading the American Renaissance in New England and in Mexico City is a bi-national literary ...
This dissertation establishes a framework for inter-American literary comparison in readings of mode...
This dissertation lies at the intersection of Marxist literary criticism, spatial literary analysis ...
This dissertation theorizes an aesthetics of extraction in the modernist dialogue between U.S. and M...
My dissertation explores the notions lyric, poetry, modernity, and America. I argue that the idea of...
William Carlos Williams wrote, “The classic is the local fully realized, words marked by a place.” T...
This dissertation offers a bilingual analysis of the transnational co-formation of U.S. and Mexican ...
In this essay, I will explore a variety of cultural productions by Mexican American writers and arti...
This study examines how modernist authors in the 1920s and early 1930s used representations of Latin...
At the end of the nineteenth century several writers in Mexico and other countries in Spanish Americ...
Between 1933 and 1945, Americans redefined their cultural identity within a hemispheric context and ...
<p>My dissertation, <“>Transcending Borders: The Transnational Construction of Mexicanness, 19...
Transindigenous Modernism indigenizes the study of literary modernism. It applies the term indigenis...
This dissertation, examines how rhizomatic cultural production in late twentieth-century Tijuana-San...
This dissertation brings to light a legacy of Mexican American spatial resilience that troubles Angl...
textRe-Reading the American Renaissance in New England and in Mexico City is a bi-national literary ...
This dissertation establishes a framework for inter-American literary comparison in readings of mode...
This dissertation lies at the intersection of Marxist literary criticism, spatial literary analysis ...
This dissertation theorizes an aesthetics of extraction in the modernist dialogue between U.S. and M...
My dissertation explores the notions lyric, poetry, modernity, and America. I argue that the idea of...
William Carlos Williams wrote, “The classic is the local fully realized, words marked by a place.” T...