The Latin American cultural studies reader
								
								
							 
							
							
							
							
								
									Ana Del Sarto is Assistant Professor of Latin American Cultures and Literatures at Bowling Green State University.
Alicia Rios is Associate Professor of Latin American Literature at Universidad Simon Bolivar in Caracas, Venezuela.
Abril Trigo is Associate Professor of Latin American Cultures at The Ohio State University.								
							 
							
							
								
									Acknowledgments  1 
  
Forerunners INTRODUCTION BYALICIA RIOS  15 
  
CAN Di DO Literature and Underdevelopment  35 
  
Notes Toward  83 
  
ANTONIO CORNEJO POLAR Indujenismoand Heterogeneous  100 
  
ANTONIO CORNEJO POLAR MestizajeTransculturation  116 
  
Foundations INTRODUCTION BY ANA DEL SARTO  153 
  
Popular Narratives for Women  183 
  
EDUARDOARCHETTI Male Hybrids in the World of Soccer  406 
  
ADRIAN GORELIKAND GRACIELA SILVESTRI The Past  427 
  
Women and Melodrama  441 
  
FRANCINE MASIELLO The Unbearable Lightness  459 
  
RENATO ORTIZ Legitimacy and Lifestyles  474 
  
DANIEL MATO The Transnational Making of Representations  498 
  
ROMAN DE LA CAM PA Mimicry and the Uncanny  535 
  
Reflections on the Folkloric  561 
  
자세히
CARLOS MONSIVAIS Would So Many Millions of People  203 
  
Nationalism  233 
  
Scission or Mimesis?  250 
  
JOSEJOAQUIN BRUNNER Notes on Modernity  291 
  
JESUS MARTJNBARBERO A Nocturnal Map  310 
  
NESTOR GARCIA CANCLiNi Cultural Studies from  329 
  
Practices INTRODUCTION BYABRILTRIGO  347 
  
IRENE SILVERBLATT Political Disfranchisement  375 
  
DEBRA A CASTILLO MARIA GUDELIA RANG EL GOMEZ  584 
  
Meanings  606 
  
On the Project  623 
  
MABELMORANA The Boom of the Subaltern  643 
  
NELLY RICHARD Intersecting Latin America with Latin  686 
  
NEILLARSEN The Cultural Studies Movement and Latin  728 
  
Acknowledgment of Copyrights  805								
							 
							
								
									That ["The Latin American Cultural Studies Reader"] brilliantly delivers on [its] ambitious goal testifies to the breadth, vision, and rigor of its editors. . . . "The Latin American Cultural Studies Reader" will serve as an insightful, balanced, indispensable guide to a hard-to-define, much contested, interdisciplinary field. . . . [S]cholars across . . . academic disciplines will be referencing this book and assigning it to graduate seminars for some years to come. More important still, coming at a crisis point in cultural studies in general, it should help reinvigorate a field worn down by more than a decade of academic culture wars and internal squabbles." --Robert Buffington," Journal of Latin American Anthropology"