Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"Chronicle of Higher Education weekly book list," by Nina C. Ayoub— Chronicle of Higher Education
"Maritza Cardenas’s deeply engaging book provides an authoritative account of the reimagination of Central America by those displaced subjects presently ensnared in US immigration politics, and still seeking validation in their new home. Her examination of the diasporic nostalgia of US Central American cultural practices traces a complex history dating back to the nineteenth century. Cardenas has written the best explanation I have ever read of these thorny issues now at the center of present-day national politics. This book is certainly an academic tour de force."— Arturo Arias, author of After the Bombs and Taking their Word: Literature and the Signs of Central America
"Constituting Central American-Americans breaks new ground and brings new insights to the fields of Latinx studies and ethnic studies."— American Literary History
"Maritza E. Cárdenas’ Constituting Central American-Americans offers an exploration of the complexities of Central American imaginaries, both within the isthmus and within the U.S. diaspora, that is both instructional and revitalizing."— Latino Studies
"Constituting Central American-Americans represents an important, well-theorized intervention in Latina/o Studies by challenging the erasure of Central Americans by their Latino counterparts and the broader mainstream culture in the United States."— Nicole M. Guidotti-Hernández, author of Unspeakable Violence: Remapping U.S. and Mexican National Imaginaries
“This book is a must read for Latinx Studies scholars. Lucidly written, it offers us multiple cultural and discursive approaches from which to understand the collective centrality of Central Americans in the diaspora, their transnationalities, the politics of recognition and de-recognition, and the relationalities to hegemonic Mexicanidades. Maritza Cárdenas argues for a more complicated understanding of Central American Americans as new diasporic ethnic sociocultural subjects in the United States. I most welcomed the author’s relational analysis of Central Americans passing for Mexican in Los Angeles, one that sets a high bar for future studies of interlatino/a power differentials and horizontal hierarchies.”— Frances Aparicio, coauthor Musical Migrations: Transnationalism and Cultural Hybridity in Latin/o America, Volume I


Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: The Isthmus Imaginary: La Patria Grande Centroaméricana
1. Remembering La Patria Grande: Locating the Nation in Central American History
2. Constructing the Central American National Imaginary
Part II: The US Diaspora: Little Central America
3. Performing Centralamericanismo: Heterotopias and Transnational Identities at the COFECA Parade
4. Subjects in Passing: Central American-Americans, Latinidad, and the Politics of Dislocation
Epilogue: La Bestia and Beyond: Migration and the Politics of Mourning
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Constituting Central AmericanAmericans

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    A Paperback by Maritza E. Cárdenas

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      Publisher: MW - Rutgers University Press
      Publication Date: 7/9/2018 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780813592824, 978-0813592824
      ISBN10: 0813592828

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      "Chronicle of Higher Education weekly book list," by Nina C. Ayoub— Chronicle of Higher Education
      "Maritza Cardenas’s deeply engaging book provides an authoritative account of the reimagination of Central America by those displaced subjects presently ensnared in US immigration politics, and still seeking validation in their new home. Her examination of the diasporic nostalgia of US Central American cultural practices traces a complex history dating back to the nineteenth century. Cardenas has written the best explanation I have ever read of these thorny issues now at the center of present-day national politics. This book is certainly an academic tour de force."— Arturo Arias, author of After the Bombs and Taking their Word: Literature and the Signs of Central America
      "Constituting Central American-Americans breaks new ground and brings new insights to the fields of Latinx studies and ethnic studies."— American Literary History
      "Maritza E. Cárdenas’ Constituting Central American-Americans offers an exploration of the complexities of Central American imaginaries, both within the isthmus and within the U.S. diaspora, that is both instructional and revitalizing."— Latino Studies
      "Constituting Central American-Americans represents an important, well-theorized intervention in Latina/o Studies by challenging the erasure of Central Americans by their Latino counterparts and the broader mainstream culture in the United States."— Nicole M. Guidotti-Hernández, author of Unspeakable Violence: Remapping U.S. and Mexican National Imaginaries
      “This book is a must read for Latinx Studies scholars. Lucidly written, it offers us multiple cultural and discursive approaches from which to understand the collective centrality of Central Americans in the diaspora, their transnationalities, the politics of recognition and de-recognition, and the relationalities to hegemonic Mexicanidades. Maritza Cárdenas argues for a more complicated understanding of Central American Americans as new diasporic ethnic sociocultural subjects in the United States. I most welcomed the author’s relational analysis of Central Americans passing for Mexican in Los Angeles, one that sets a high bar for future studies of interlatino/a power differentials and horizontal hierarchies.”— Frances Aparicio, coauthor Musical Migrations: Transnationalism and Cultural Hybridity in Latin/o America, Volume I


      Table of Contents
      Introduction
      Part I: The Isthmus Imaginary: La Patria Grande Centroaméricana
      1. Remembering La Patria Grande: Locating the Nation in Central American History
      2. Constructing the Central American National Imaginary
      Part II: The US Diaspora: Little Central America
      3. Performing Centralamericanismo: Heterotopias and Transnational Identities at the COFECA Parade
      4. Subjects in Passing: Central American-Americans, Latinidad, and the Politics of Dislocation
      Epilogue: La Bestia and Beyond: Migration and the Politics of Mourning
      Acknowledgments
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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