Améfrica in Letters
Literary Interventions from Mexico to the Southern Cone
- 246 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Améfrica in Letters
Literary Interventions from Mexico to the Southern Cone
About This Book
Traditional histories of Black letters in Latin America have delimited their geographic scope to the Caribbean while also omitting intertwined Afro-Indigenous discourses. Inspired by the legacy of Amefrican thinker Lélia Gonzalez, Améfrica in Letters highlights the Black poets, songwriters, novelists, essayists, and bloggers who have created a counter-multiculturalist literary history on the Latin American mainland. To capture a sense of the variety of their contributions, this book spans Mexico, Central America, the Andes, and the Southern Cone—highlighting the transcontinental nature of the legacy of Black writing and its impact beyond national boundaries. The writers examined in the volume engage with regional intellectual frameworks while putting into circulation a demand for a recalibration of the Hispanophone and Lusophone contexts in which they and other Afrodescendants reside.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Series Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction. Black Writing on the Latin American Mainland: Disruptions to the Prose of Multiculturalism
- Part I. Afro Poetics
- Part II. Lettered Outliers
- Part III. Intellectual Sonar
- Contributors
- Index
- Series List