Emma Trelles, Darrel Alejandro Holnes, James Mesiti, John Rubio, J. Cutler, A. Varón, Stephanie Fetta, Andrés Montoya, J. Morales, Aitor Bouso Gavín, Eliza Rodriguez, Francisco Aragón, F. Zamora, David Campos, Sheryl Luna, Paul Martinez Pompa, L. A. Guerrero, Gabe Gomez, heidi andrea restrepo rhodes
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Abstract:In this essay, I examine the posthumous collection a jury of trees (2017) by Chicano poet Andrés Montoya (1968–1999). I argue that post-1960s attempts to roll back achievements of the broader Civil Rights Movement shape Montoya’s view of spirituality-as-politics and his concept of a long Chicano/Chicana/Chicanx social justice movement. The study follows the chronological trajectory of Montoya’s development as a poet and activist, focusing on Montoya’s critique of multiculturalism and its relation to the articulation of a decolonial imperative in a jury of trees.