Are Pachucos Subalterns?: Crime, Liminality, and the Uncanny in Early Chicano Literature
This article studies the novels of Daniel Venegas, Jovita González, and Américo Paredes that they wrote between 1928-1938. Indigeneity, marriage, liminality, and volition are major themes in the works of each author, all of which analyze the state of Chicanos in the Southwest during the first decade...
Main Author: | Paco Martín del Campo |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Latin American Research Commons
2017-11-01
|
Series: | Latin American Literary Review |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://account.lalrp.net/index.php/lasa-j-lalr/article/view/26 |
Similar Items
-
Liminalities and Displacements: The Rites of Passage to Self-Identification in Chicano Writings
by: Sophia Emmanouilidou
Published: (2013-06-01) -
Indigeneity, Subalternity and Lakota Territorial Resurgence: Disrupting Urban Settler Colonial Order in a US Bordertown
by: Sandrine Baudry, et al.
Published: (2024-01-01) -
Revisiting Liminality: Contestation of Abuse and the Politics of Reclamation of Identity in Austin Clarke’s The Polished Hoe
by: Marietta Kosma
Published: (2022-01-01) -
Exercising Dominion: Landscape, Civilisation and Racial Politics in Capricornia
by: Michael Thomas Ellis
Published: (2016-06-01) -
Liminal Identity of Gypsies in Tehran
by: Samareh Safikhani, et al.
Published: (2016-12-01)