“<i>Interrogating the Future of Puerto Rican Studies</i> is a work of both substantial scholarship and moral urgency. A multi-faceted examination of Puerto Ricans’ past and present, it is a call to challenge the silencing, a call that surfaces many questions. Students, journalists and activist networks will use it in thinking through the truths—and lies—about racial capitalism and imperial domination, as well as meanings of resistance and belonging.”—<b>Arcadio Díaz-Quiñones</b>, Emeritus Professor, Princeton University<br /><br />“<i>Interrogating the Future of Puerto Rican Studies</i> marks a pivotal moment in the field, emerging amid deepening colonial crises in Puerto Rico and rising cultural pride. It centers Puerto Rico to examine U.S. empire, colonialism, and racial capitalism. This collection rightfully pushes Blackness and Queerness to the center of the field, and demands that Puerto Rican Studies be central to American and ethnic studies. Both timely and transformative, this collection is essential reading for understanding the evolving scope and stakes of the Puerto Rican Studies.”—<b>Vanessa Díaz</b>, author of <i>Manufacturing Celebrity: Latino Paparazzi and Women Reporters in Hollywood</i>
Introduction: Interrogating the Future of Puerto Rican Studies / Aurora Santiago Ortiz and Jorell A. Meléndez-Badillo 1
I. Puerto Rican Studies in Broader Fields of Knowledges
1. Puerto Rican Studies as Caribbean, Latin American, and Diasporic Knowledges / Jorell A. MelÉndez-Badillo 19
2. How We Came to Know the Most Important Place in the World: Centering Puerto Rican Studies in American Studies / Marisol Lebrón 34
3. Puerto Rican Studies as Latinx Studies / Marisel Moreno 45
II. Queering Puerto Rican Studies
4. Sustento and the Queer Feminist Politics of Awilda RodrÍguez Lora’s La Mujer Maravilla / Lawrence La Fountain-Stokes 63
5. “El aÑo que viene, viene peor”: AlegrÍa Rampante’s Queer Cartography of Puerto Rican Dystopia / Daniela Crespo-MirÓ 82
6. Queer Creation, Struggle, and Thought at the Coloquio ¿Del otro la’o? Perspectivas y debates sobre lo cuir (2006–present) / Beatriz LlenÍn Figueroa, Translated by Nicole Cecilia Delgado 103
III. Centering Blackness
7. “Nosotros hemos quedado marca’o con ese huracÁn”: Afro-Boricua Women Reflecting on Survival in the Wake of Hurricane MarÍa / Yomaira C. Figueroa-VÁsquez 117
8. Afro-Puerto Rican Studies and Transgressing Epistemological Narratives: Facing and Surviving Anti-Black Racism in Puerto Rico / BÁrbara I. AbadÍa-Rexach 136
9. A Festival in Black / Pedro LebrÓn Ortiz 153
IV. Disaster Studies and Environmental Studies
10. ¿TÚ EstÁs Preparado?: Anticipatory Emergency Governance in Puerto Rico / Sarah Molinari 169
11. Making Decolonial Environmental Justice Futures in Puerto Rico / Gustavo GarcÍa LÓpez 180
12. Vulnerable and Unruly Survival: Land Ontologies and Vieques, Puerto Rico / Marie Cruz Soto 209
V. Prefigurative Politics and Social Movements
13. Forging Puerto Rico’s Infrastructures of Resistance: Toward a Prefigurative Anti-Colonial Praxis in Puerto Rico / Aurora Santiago Ortiz 225
14. Reverberations of Mutual Aid: Centros de Apoyo Mutuo and the January 2020 Earthquakes in Puerto Rico / Roberto VÉlez-VÉlez and Jacqueline Villarrubia-Mendoza 245
15. Dimensions of Debility: Toward a Puerto Rican Debility Studies / Daniel NevÁrez AraÚjo and Daniel J. VÁzquez Sanabria 263
VI. Legal and Political Disruptions
16. We Are Done Emerging: Puerto Rico, Legal Scholarship, and the Problem of Invisibility / MÓnica A. JimÉnez 281
17. Sovereignty Claims, Money Laundering, and Anti-Corruption in Puerto Rico / JosÉ Atiles and JoaquÍn Villanueva 292
18. Decolonial Visions Across Oceanic Borderspaces: Puerto Rican Challenges to US Empire / Karrieann Soto Vega 308
Epilogue. Pulse Check: On the Vitality of Puerto Rican Art / Marcela Guerrero 324
Contributors 333
Index
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Aurora Santiago Ortiz is Assistant Professor of Gender & Women Studies and Chicane/Latine Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.Jorell A. Meléndez-Badillo is Associate Professor of Latin American and Caribbean History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and is the author, most recently, of Puerto Rico: A National History.