1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910862096703321

Autore

Ulibarri Kristy L

Titolo

Visible Borders, Invisible Economies : Living Death in Latinx Narratives

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Austin : , : University of Texas Press, , 2022

©2022

ISBN

1-4773-2602-2

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (283 pages)

Collana

Latinx: the Future Is Now

Disciplina

809.93352968

Soggetti

Government, Resistance to - United States

Latin Americans in literature

Latin Americans in motion pictures

Latin Americans - Violence against - United States

Latin Americans - United States - Economic conditions

Latin Americans - United States - Social conditions

National security - Social aspects - United States

Neoliberalism and literature - United States

Neoliberalism in literature

Neoliberalism - Social aspects - United States

SOCIAL SCIENCE / General

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Intro -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Imagination in the Age of National Security and Market Neoliberalization -- Part I. Documenting the Living Dead -- 1. Games of Enterprise and Security in Luis Alberto Urrea, Valeria Luiselli, and Karla Cornejo Villavicencio -- 2. Documenting the US-Mexico Border: Photography, Movement, and Paradox -- 3. Latinx Realisms: The Cinematic Borderworlds of Josefina López, David Riker, and Alex Rivera -- Part II. Imagining the Living Dead -- 4. Markets of Resurrection: Cat Ghosts, Aztec Zombies, and the Living Dead Economy -- 5. Speculative Governances of the Dead: The Underclass, Underworld, and Undercommons -- Coda: Dreaming of Deportation, or, When Everything "Goes South" -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.



Sommario/riassunto

Globalization in the United States can seem paradoxical: free trade coincides with fortification of the southern border, while immigration is reimagined as a national-security threat. US politics turn aggressively against Latinx migrants and subjects even as post-NAFTA markets become thoroughly reliant on migrant and racialized workers. But in fact, there is no incongruity here. Rather, anti-immigrant politics reflect a strategy whereby capital uses specialized forms of violence to create a reserve army of the living, laboring dead. Visible Borders, Invisible Economies turns to Latinx literature, photography, and films that render this unseen scheme shockingly vivid. Works such as Valeria Luiselli’s Tell Me How It Ends and Alex Rivera’s Sleep Dealer crystallize the experience of Latinx subjects and migrants subjugated to social death, their political existence erased by disenfranchisement and racist violence while their bodies still toil in behalf of corporate profits. In Kristy L. Ulibarri’s telling, art clarifies what power obscures: the national-security state performs anti-immigrant and xenophobic politics that substitute cathartic nationalism for protections from the free market while ensuring maximal corporate profits through the manufacture of disposable migrant labor.