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War Echoes examines how Latina/o cultural production has engaged
with U.S. militarism in the post-Viet Nam era. Analysing literature
alongside film, memoir, and activism, Ariana E. Vigil highlights
the productive interplay among social, political, and cultural
movements while exploring Latina/o responses to U.S. intervention
in Central America and the Middle East. These responses evolved
over the course of the late twentieth and early twenty-first
centuries-from support for anti-imperial war, as seen in Alejandro
Murguia's Southern Front, to the disavowal of all war articulated
in works such as Demetria Martinez's Mother Tongue and Camilo
Mejia's Road from Ar Ramadi. With a focus on how issues of race,
class, gender, and sexuality intersect and are impacted by war and
militarization, War Echoes illustrates how this country's bellicose
foreign policies have played an integral part in shaping U.S.
Latina/o culture and identity and given rise to the creation of
works that recognize how militarized violence and values, such as
patriarchy, hierarchy, and obedience, are both enacted in domestic
spheres and propagated abroad.
War Echoes examines how Latina/o cultural production has engaged
with U.S. militarism in the post-Vietnam era. Analyzing literature
alongside film, memoir, and activism, Ariana E. Vigil highlights
the productive interplay among social, political, and cultural
movements while exploring Latina/o responses to U.S. intervention
in Central America and the Middle East. These responses evolved
over the course of the late twentieth and early twenty-first
centuries-from support for anti-imperial war, as seen in Alejandro
Murguia's Southern Front, to the disavowal of all war articulated
in works such as Demetria Martinez's Mother Tongue and Camilo
Mejia's Road from Ar Ramadi. With a focus on how issues of race,
class, gender, and sexuality intersect and are impacted by war and
militarization, War Echoes illustrates how this country's bellicose
foreign policies have played an integral part in shaping U.S.
Latina/o culture and identity and given rise to the creation of
works that recognize how militarized violence and values, such as
patriarchy, hierarchy, and obedience, are both enacted in domestic
spheres and propagated abroad.
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