Border Confluences

Subtitle
Borderland Narratives from the Mexican War to the Present

Author Rosemary King

Writers focusing on the U.S.-Mexico border are keen observers of cultural interaction, and their work offers a key to understanding the region and its most important issues. For more than 150 years, novelists from both the United States and Mexico have spun stories about the borderlands in which characters react to cultural differences in the region, and this has become a dominant theme in border fiction. Authors such as Helen Hunt Jackson, Carlos Fuentes, Cormac McCarthy and Leslie Marmon Silko have not only created important literature; in so doing, they have also helped define the border. Writers who are drawn to the borderlands owe the narrative power of their work to compelling relationships between literary constructions of space and artistic expressions of cultural encounter. Rosemary King now offers a new way of understanding the conflicts these writers portray by analyzing their representations of geography and genre.

Bio

Rosemary King earned a doctorate in English in 2000.


Praise for this book

'Border Confluences' ought to enrich the questions historians ask as they increasingly turn their attention to the ways Borderlands people conceived of themselves and their neighbors.

New Mexico Historical Review

'Border Confluences' has a clear focus and organization, and her conclusions will provide those interested in border literature with significant issues for discussion and argument.”

Southwestern Historical Quarterly
Cover of "Border Confluences" featuring an image of a U.S.-Mexico map
Date published
Publisher
University of Arizona Press
ISBN
978-0816523351

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