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- Western American Literature
- University of Nebraska Press
- Article
- “Refusing to halt”: Mobility and the Quest for Spatial Justice in Helena María Viramontes’s Their Dogs Came with Them and Karen Tei Yamashita’s Tropic of Orange Volume 48, Numbers 1 & 2, Spring/Summer 2013, pp. 70-89
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $28.50 USD.
This issue contains 12 articles in total
- Contributors
- Introduction: Assessing the Postwestern
- “Might be going to have lived”: The West in the Subjunctive Mood
- Critical Regionalism, the US-Mexican War, and Nineteenth-Century American Literary History
- The Past and the Postwestern: Garland’s Cavanagh, Closure, and Conventions of Reading
- “It All Comes Together” in … Reno?: Confronting the Postwestern Geographic Imaginary in Willy Vlautin’s The Motel Life
- Settler Sovereignty and the Rhizomatic West, or, The Significance of the Frontier in Postwestern Studies
- Shaking Awake the Memory: The Gothic Quest for Place in Sandra Cisneros’s Caramelo
- “Refusing to halt”: Mobility and the Quest for Spatial Justice in Helena María Viramontes’s Their Dogs Came with Them and Karen Tei Yamashita’s Tropic of Orange
- Narcocorridos and the Nostalgia of Violence: Postmodern Resistance en la Frontera
- Third Cinema Goes West: Common Ground for Film and Literary Theory in Postregional Discourse
- Inhabiting the Icon: Shipping Containers and the New Imagination of Western Space
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