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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jennifer Harford Vargas (Associate Professor of English, Associate Professor of English, Bryn Mawr College)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 23.60cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 16.30cm Weight: 0.621kg ISBN: 9780190642853ISBN 10: 0190642858 Pages: 280 Publication Date: 28 December 2017 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Undergraduate , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsIntroduction Chapter 1: Dictating Narrative Power Chapter 2: The Borderlands of Authoritarianism Chapter 3: The Floating Dictatorship Chapter 4: Plotting Justice Chapter 5: The Fall of the Patriarchs Coda Works CitedReviews""Forms of Dictatorship is not only a worthwhile but also a highly relevant undertaking which pays attention to how literary works created by Latina/o writers living in the United States use the trope of dictatorship to discuss the current sociopoliti-cal landscape of the United States."" -- Angelika Köhler, Amerikastudien ""A well-written and thoroughly researched study, Forms of Dictatorship is pivotal to understanding the contemporary Latina/o dictatorship novel and its complex aesthetics and politics in relation to various forms of authoritarian power."" -- Elizabeth Anne Jacobs, Modern Language Review ""Forms of Dictatorship shows the critical payoffs that the careful analysis of content and form provides for Latinx literary studies. The book speaks to many contemporary issues, such as Central American migration, state-sanctioned violence against Afrodiasporic, Latinx, and indigenous people, and technologies of surveillance. Harford Vargas provides a blueprint for future scholars looking to apply a comparative American and trans-American framework to Latinx and Latin American studies."" -- Regina Marie Mills, Studies in the Novel ""Forms of Dictatorship makes a strong case for why and how Latina/o and Latin American studies can be productively brought into conversation. Harford Vargas takes seriously how the form of the novel, anti-colonial imaginaries, and questions of racial, class, gender, and sexual justice are represented on both sides of the U.S./Mexican border and beyond. The book offers a model for taking seriously the hemispheric connections between Latina/o studies and Latin American Studies."" --David Vázquez, University of Oregon ""Elegantly written, with a series of striking analyses, Forms of Dictatorship draws together Latin American critical history of the dictatorship novel and US Latino/a novels about authoritarian regimes. Vargas' attention to formal innovation, combined with her breadth of knowledge of the literature of the Américas, makes Forms of Dictatorship a crucial contribution to the study of contemporary literature."" --Mary Pat Brady, Cornell Forms of Dictatorship makes a strong case for why and how Latina/o and Latin American studies can be productively brought into conversation. Harford Vargas takes seriously how the form of the novel, anti-colonial imaginaries, and questions of racial, class, gender, and sexual justice are represented on both sides of the U.S./Mexican border and beyond. The book offers a model for taking seriously the hemispheric connections between Latina/o studies and Latin American Studies. --David Vazquez, University of Oregon Elegantly written, with a series of striking analyses, Forms of Dictatorship draws together Latin American critical history of the dictatorship novel and US Latino/a novels about authoritarian regimes. Vargas' attention to formal innovation, combined with her breadth of knowledge of the literature of the Americas, makes Forms of Dictatorship a crucial contribution to the study of contemporary literature. --Mary Pat Brady, Cornell Forms of Dictatorship shows the critical payoffs that the careful analysis of content and form provides for Latinx literary studies. The book speaks to many contemporary issues, such as Central American migration, state-sanctioned violence against Afrodiasporic, Latinx, and indigenous people, and technologies of surveillance. Harford Vargas provides a blueprint for future scholars looking to apply a comparative American and trans-American framework to Latinx and Latin American studies. -- Regina Marie Mills, Studies in the Novel Forms of Dictatorship makes a strong case for why and how Latina/o and Latin American studies can be productively brought into conversation. Harford Vargas takes seriously how the form of the novel, anti-colonial imaginaries, and questions of racial, class, gender, and sexual justice are represented on both sides of the U.S./Mexican border and beyond. The book offers a model for taking seriously the hemispheric connections between Latina/o studies and Latin American Studies. --David Vazquez, University of Oregon Elegantly written, with a series of striking analyses, Forms of Dictatorship draws together Latin American critical history of the dictatorship novel and US Latino/a novels about authoritarian regimes. Vargas' attention to formal innovation, combined with her breadth of knowledge of the literature of the Americas, makes Forms of Dictatorship a crucial contribution to the study of contemporary literature. --Mary Pat Brady, Cornell Forms of Dictatorship makes a strong case for why and how Latina/o and Latin American studies can be productively brought into conversation. Harford Vargas takes seriously how the form of the novel, anti-colonial imaginaries, and questions of racial, class, gender, and sexual justice are represented on both sides of the U.S./Mexican border and beyond. The book offers a model for taking seriously the hemispheric connections between Latina/o studies and Latin American Studies. --David Vazquez, University of Oregon Elegantly written, with a series of striking analyses, Forms of Dictatorship draws together Latin American critical history of the dictatorship novel and US Latino/a novels about authoritarian regimes. Vargas' attention to formal innovation, combined with her breadth of knowledge of the literature of the Americas, makes Forms of Dictatorship a crucial contribution to the study of contemporary literature. --Mary Pat Brady, Cornell Author InformationJennifer Harford Vargas is an Associate Professor of English at Bryn Mawr College. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |