Book Cover

National Body in Mexican Literature: Collective Challenges to Biopolitical Control (2015)

Contributor(s): Janzen, Rebecca (Author)

ISBN: 9781137546272

Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan

Hardcover
$54.99
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Pub Date: September 10, 2015

Dewey: 863.6409972

LCCN: 2015009959

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Dust Cover, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.50" H x 8.50" L x 5.50" W ( 0.87 lbs) 199 pages

Series: Literatures of the Americas

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: "This book explores how the body literary fiction from 1940 to 1980, by Josae Revueltas, Juan Rulfo, Rosario Castellanos and Vicente Leanero, reflects the control of the Mexican State. It envisions characters who are sick, disabled or miraculously healed as a collective that challenges this control" --

Review Quotes:

"Rebecca Janzen is a rising star in the Mexicanist field, as evidenced by her close readings of the twentieth-century Mexican canon." - Emily Hind, Associate Professor of Spanish & Portuguese, University of Florida, USA

"Blind prostitutes and criminals, mestizo patriarchs and indigenous matriarchs, labor organizing messiahs, and millions of chilangos bustling through the Mexico City subway system. These are the inhabitants of the short stories, novels, and chronicles that appear in Rebecca Janzen's The National Body in Mexican Literature. Through a series of seamlessly integrated historical reflections and insightful literary analyses, Janzen elegantly explores how these characters represent, confront, contest, and become subject to the post-revolutionary State's biopolitical power." - Brian L. Price, Associate Professor of Hispanic Literature and Culture, Brigham Young University, USA

"The National Body in Mexican Literature is a major contribution to the study of Mexican Literature, and undoubtedly one of the most important books on Mexican cultural studies to emerge in recent years. Janzen's book shows how the Mexican State uses the body (illnesses, disabilities, or marginal experiences of the body) to convey a vision of the 'National body.' In studying literary works, the author is able to portray a thought-provoking book that challenges current interpretations and reads against the grain of the canonical representations of some of our major works of fiction." - Pedro Palou, Associate Professor of Latin American Literature and Studies, Tufts University, USA

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