“在沙漠里,我们都是非法移民”:路易斯·阿尔贝托·乌雷亚的《魔鬼公路》中的边境汇合和边境战争

IF 0.1 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM American, British and Canadian Studies Pub Date : 2019-12-01 DOI:10.2478/abcsj-2019-0022
Raluca Andreescu
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2001年5月,一个由26名墨西哥公民组成的旅行团试图穿越亚利桑那州沙漠,以非法进入美国。由于边境巡逻队的干预,14人死亡,12人勉强通过边境,他们的尝试成为了头版新闻事件。在美国不断收紧反移民法的背景下,我的文章旨在研究路易斯·阿尔贝托·乌雷亚的《魔鬼的公路:一个真实的故事》(2004)以一种相当诗意和神话的方式再现了这群人从墨西哥通过“巨大的沙子欺骗”来到美国的旅程。我认为,Urrea的叙述包含了多个视角(移民和他们的土狼、移民当局、边境巡逻人员、边境双方的高级官员),它见证并揭示了那些试图穿越沙漠非法进入美国的人往往看不见的困境。因此,它通过关注人口走私活动的日常现实及其在边境地区的经济和社会后果,使原本枯燥的移民管制统计数据人性化。与此同时,我的论文强调了Wellton 26案对美墨边境身份政治和死亡政治(重新)谈判的影响。
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“In the desert, we are all illegal aliens”: Border Confluences and Border Wars in Luis Alberto Urrea’s The Devil’s Highway
Abstract In May 2001, a traveling party of 26 Mexican citizens tried to cross the Arizonan desert in order to enter the United States illegally. Their attempt turned into a front-page news event after 14 died and 12 barely made it across the border due to Border Patrol intervention. Against the background of consistent tightening of anti-immigration laws in the United States, my essay aims to examine the manner in which Luis Alberto Urrea’s The Devil’s Highway: A True Story (2004) reenacts the group’s journey from Mexico through the “vast trickery of sand” to the United States in a rather poetic and mythical rendition of the travel north. Written to include multiple perspectives (of the immigrants and their coyotes, the immigration authorities, Border Patrol agents, high officials on both sides of the border), Urrea’s account, I argue, stands witness to and casts light on the often invisible plight of those attempting illegal passage to the United States across the desert. It thus humanizes the otherwise dry statistics of immigration control by focusing on the everyday realities of human-smuggling operations and their economic and social consequences in the borderland region. At the same time, my paper highlights the impact of the Wellton 26 case on the (re)negotiation of identity politics and death politics at the US-Mexican border.
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来源期刊
American, British and Canadian Studies
American, British and Canadian Studies Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Founded in 1999, American, British and Canadian Studies, the journal of the Academic Anglophone Society of Romania, is currently published by Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu. Re-launched in refashioned, biannual format, American, British and Canadian Studies is an international, peer-reviewed journal that sets out to explore disciplinary developments in Anglophone Studies in the changing environment forged by the intersections of culture, technology and electronic information. Our primary goal is to bring together in productive dialogue scholars conducting advanced research in the theoretical humanities. As well as offering innovative approaches to influential crosscurrents in contemporary thinking, the journal seeks to contribute fresh angles to the academic subject of English and promote shape-changing research across conventional boundaries. By virtue of its dynamic and varied profile and of the intercultural dialogue that it caters for, ABC Studies aims to fill a gap in the Romanian academic arena, and function as the first publication to approach Anglophone studies in a multi-disciplinary perspective. Within the proposed range of diversity, our major scope is to provide close examinations and lucid analyses of the role and future of the academic institutions at the cutting edge of high-tech. With this end in view, we especially invite contributions in the fields of Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies, Postcolonial Theory, Area Studies, Cultural Anthropology, Language and Linguistics, Multimedia and Digital Arts, Translation Studies and related subjects. With its wide subject range, American, British and Canadian Studies aims to become one of the academic community’s premium scholarly resources.
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