1. Fear: Junot Díaz's zombies and les contorsions extraordinaires in 'Monstro'; 2. Commodification: Badagry and the African safari of Achy Obejas's Ruins; 3. Obliteration: Gabriel García Márquez and his Angolan chronicles of a 'Latin-African' death foretold; 4. Archival distortion: The Chicano-Congo Relación of Tomás Rivera and Rudolfo Anaya.
Interweaving the influential voices of African, Caribbean, and Latinx authors, this book challenges eurocentric notions of World Literature.
Sarah M. Quesada is an Assistant Professor of Romance Studies at Duke University.
'By rehabilitating and privileging the African archive in her
account of Latinx/Caribbean relations, Sarah Quesada's book
provides a fresh and very welcome instalment to debates about
Pan-Africanism. But here, Pan-Africanism is more than just an
aspirational political project, long distracted by the cynical
pragmatism of political leaders. Rather, it is a work of
re-animation that will redefine African and African diasporic
relations through a well-grounded and nuanced humanities
perspective. This book is a magnificent gift offering.' Ato
Quayson, Stanford University
'Beautifully written, well researched and bold in its
formulations, The African Heritage of Latinx and Caribbean
Literature is an important intervention in the reading of
Latinx and Latin American literature, widely defined. The
brilliance of the book is manifest in the analysis, in which the
Sarah Quesada unearths discreet connections to Africa and unfolds
them into an ambitious and successful re-cartography of the
Atlantic through a Latin America-Africa axis that is very
persuasive and unique.' Ignacio Sanchez Prado, Washington
University in St. Louis
'Sarah Quesada has written a BIG book, both in its scholarly import
and geographic scope. Quesada finally centers Africa in study of
the Black Atlantic. She also redresses its exclusion of Latin
America - a region that received three-quarters of enslaved
Africans during the colonial period - while making plain why Latinx
literature has always been a world literature. Reading
comparatively and with laser focus across four languages, dozens of
colonial archives, and three continents, Quesada traces the textual
memory and political internationalism that has thrived for over
eighty years among authors and political actors from the US
Southwest, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Cuba, Colombia, and
Benin, Nigeria, Senegal, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Quesada presents the reader with the beating nexus of cultural,
political, and aesthetic Latin-Africa, in vivid and engaging prose,
such as only a generational thinker can accomplish. Afrolatinidad
is redefined in her capable hands.' María Josefina
Saldaña-Portillo, New York University
'Quesada's The African Heritage of Latinx and Caribbean Literature
transforms Paul Gilroy's notion of The Black
Atlantic into an Afro-Latino Atlantic…Quesada is able to make
a hopeful argument for the possibility of fiction - whether
traditional print novels or heritage site oral storytelling - to
helpfully respond to and potentially transform the path wrought by
this real and symbolic violence.' Tom McEnaney, University of
California, Berkeley
'Quesada's book offers a useful model on how to move from
Eurocentric interpretations that have obscured the Black presence
in Latinx and Caribbean fiction toward an innovative
African-centered approach that promises to invigorate the field.'
Jose O. Fernandez, American Literary History
'As a text anchored in World Literature, it also provides a useful
introduction to the major frameworks of this field for scholars
grounded in Caribbean, Latin American, and Latinx literature, all
of whom are potential readers of this study.' Rebeca L. Hey-Colón,
Chasqui
'… The book's major strength is the stress on African
particularity, even as it chronicles the failures of authors
discussed in the book to fully grasp this particularity … but its
skillful reading deployed in the book opens the space for
rehabilitation, even at the scene of distortion. Restoring its
African inheritance to Latinx literature, Quesada instructs us to
take the continent seriously.' Cajetan Iheka, Syndicate
Literature
'Through impressive fieldwork and archival research, Quesada
excavates the imprint of African epistemologies, histories,
spiritual practices, and proverbs on Latinx writing. … In blazing
trails overgrown with racism and neglect, Quesada's precise prose
engenders new connections among them. … Ultimately, [the work]
makes an airtight case for the significance of Latin-African
conjunctions.' Michael Dowdy, Latino Studies
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