{"title":"Writing Refugee Crisis in the Age of Amazon: Lost Children Archive's Reenactment Play","authors":"Patricia Stuelke","doi":"10.1215/00166928-8911498","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This essay analyzes Valeria Luiselli's 2019 novel Lost Children Archive's attempt to imagine anti-imperialist solidarity aesthetics in a moment of the increasing imbrication of the US literary sphere and settler colonial capitalist surveillance of the US-Mexico border, as well as the nonprofit care regime that has arisen to oppose and ameliorate its effects. Because these structures converge around overt and subterranean investments in settler colonial frontier fantasy, the essay focuses particularly on Lost Children Archive's engagement with the tradition of the white male road novel Western in the Americas—Luiselli's attempts to write both through and against this form—as part of the novel's larger attempt to grapple with the formal problems that adhere in representing the temporality and scale of ongoing Central American Indigenous dispossession and refugee displacement in settler colonial capitalism. In exploring the degree to which the Western genre's tradition of, per Philip Deloria, “playing Indian” might oppose the brutal bureaucratic violence of the xenophobic carceral settler US state, the novel builds a critique of the frontier road novel fantasy that it cannot quite sustain.","PeriodicalId":84799,"journal":{"name":"Genre (Los Angeles, Calif.)","volume":"57 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Genre (Los Angeles, Calif.)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1215/00166928-8911498","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
This essay analyzes Valeria Luiselli's 2019 novel Lost Children Archive's attempt to imagine anti-imperialist solidarity aesthetics in a moment of the increasing imbrication of the US literary sphere and settler colonial capitalist surveillance of the US-Mexico border, as well as the nonprofit care regime that has arisen to oppose and ameliorate its effects. Because these structures converge around overt and subterranean investments in settler colonial frontier fantasy, the essay focuses particularly on Lost Children Archive's engagement with the tradition of the white male road novel Western in the Americas—Luiselli's attempts to write both through and against this form—as part of the novel's larger attempt to grapple with the formal problems that adhere in representing the temporality and scale of ongoing Central American Indigenous dispossession and refugee displacement in settler colonial capitalism. In exploring the degree to which the Western genre's tradition of, per Philip Deloria, “playing Indian” might oppose the brutal bureaucratic violence of the xenophobic carceral settler US state, the novel builds a critique of the frontier road novel fantasy that it cannot quite sustain.
本文分析了瓦莱里娅·路易斯利(Valeria Luiselli)在2019年出版的小说《迷失的孩子档案》(Lost Children Archive)中,在美国文学界日益融合、移民殖民资本主义对美墨边境的监视以及为反对和改善其影响而出现的非营利护理制度的时刻,她试图想象反帝国主义团结美学。因为这些结构集中在定居者对殖民边境幻想的公开和地下投资上,这篇文章特别关注《迷失儿童档案》与美国西部白人男性道路小说传统的接触——路易斯塞利试图通过和反对这种形式来写作——作为小说更大的尝试的一部分,它试图解决形式问题,这些问题坚持表现中美洲土著被剥夺和难民流离失所的临时性和规模。按照菲利普·德洛里亚(Philip Deloria)的说法,在探索西方小说类型的传统——“扮演印第安人”——在多大程度上可能会反对仇外移民美国州的残酷官僚暴力的过程中,这部小说建立了对边疆公路小说幻想的批判,但它无法完全维持下去。