Borderland Biopolitics Public Health and Border Enforcement in Early Twentieth-Century Latinx Fiction
Creator
Bracken R C
Publisher
English Language Notes
Date
2018
2018-10
Description
This article situates early twentieth-century Latinx fiction within the intertwined histories of public health and border surveillance along the Rio Grande to reveal a "borderland biopolitics" unique to the US-Mexico border region. Drawing on three early twentieth-century novels-Daniel Venegas's Adventures of Don Chipote, Americo Paredes's George Washington Gomez, and Jovita Gonzalez and Eve Raleigh's Caballero- it adds another layer of historical nuance to studies of Latinx literature by demonstrating the profound, pervasive influence that epidemiological science and public health policy have had in shaping national identity politics in the borderlands. Because militarized border control evolves from public health efforts, reframing analyses of Latinx fiction to read for public health provides fresh insight into institutionalized forms of discrimination and social injustice that continue to condition Latinx lives in the US-Mexico borderlands.