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Border Writing
The Multidimensional Text
Emily D. Hicks
Foreword by Neil Larsen
OUT OF PRINT
A paradigmatic contribution to literary theory and interpretation out of the writings of Latin America.
Until recently, literary theory has been grounded in the histories of English, French, German, and Spanish literature. The terms and models for the production of literature and its function in culture and society were decided in Western Europe, and any deviations were immediately marginalized. This Eurocentric view has been widely attached by postmodern, feminist, and postcolonial political practices.
Drawing on a variety of critical and theoretical sources, D. Emily Hicks employs the concept of border writing to consider the complexities of contemporary Latin American writing. With its emphasis on the multiplicity of languages and the problems of translation, border writing connotes a perspective that is no longer determined by neat distinctions. Hicks combines Deleuze and Guattari’s notion of “deterritorialization” (the geographic, linguistic, or cultural displacement from one’s own country, language, or native culture) with a holographic metaphor in provocative readings of Latin America writers, including Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Luisa Valenzuela, and Julio Cortazar. The result is a volume that forces the reader to consider the development of literature in terms of strategies and tactics that contribute to the production of meaning in culturally complex and politically repressive societies.
"Border Writing examines a newly emerging culture-space, the borderland between Mexico and the United States. Border Writing is worthy addition to the Theory and History of Literature Series of the University of Minnesota Press." —World Literature Today
"Though successful as a conventional academic study, Border Writing also operates brilliantly as the kind of text is describes. Hick's discussion inventively challenges readers to 'deterritorialize' their categories of literary and political analysis." —Comparative Literature
"Border Writing offers new perspectives and approaches to texts that will permit readings which reflect the complexity of those subjects and cultural productions whose myriad of referential codes require a border reader-one who can 'look in two directions at the same time." —Studies in 20th Century Literature
D. Emily Hicks is associate professor of English and comparative literature and a member of the Latin American studies faculty at San Diego State University. Neil Larsen is associate professor of Spanish and Latin American literature at Northeastern University and the author of Modernism and Hegemony: A Materialist Critique of Aesthetic Agencies.
256 pages | 1991
Theory and History of Literature Series, volume 80