The Deportation of Wopper Barraza

The Deportation of Wopper Barraza
Author: Maceo Montoya
Publisher: UNM Press
Total Pages: 183
Release: 2014-02-15
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0826354378

“A brilliant and innovative take on an issue close to the hearts and minds of families who have one foot planted firmly on both sides of the border. It is a deportation story in reverse: a bold re-envisioning with unexpected consequences, mystery, and insight.”—Tim Z. Hernandez, author of Mañana Means Heaven After Wopper Barraza’s fourth drunk driving violation, the judge orders his immediate deportation. “But I haven’t been there since I was a little kid,” says Wopper, whose parents brought him to California when he was three years old. Now he has to move back to Michoacán. When he learns that his longtime girlfriend is pregnant, the future looks even more uncertain. Wopper's story unfolds as life in a rural village takes him in new and unexpected directions. This immigrant saga in reverse is a story of young people who must live with the reality of their parents’ dream. We know this story from the headlines, but up to now it has been unexplored literary territory.

Scales of Captivity

Scales of Captivity
Author: Mary Pat Brady
Publisher: Duke University Press
Total Pages: 175
Release: 2021-12-13
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1478022558

In Scales of Captivity, Mary Pat Brady traces the figure of the captive or cast-off child in Latinx and Chicanx literature and art between chattel slavery’s final years and the mass deportations of the twenty-first century. She shows how Latinx expressive practices expose how every rescaling of economic and military power requires new modalities of capture, new ways to bracket and hedge life. Through readings of novels by Helena María Viramontes, Oscar Casares, Lorraine López, Maceo Montoya, Reyna Grande, Daniel Peña, and others, Brady illustrates how submerged captivities reveal the way mechanisms of constraint such as deportability ground institutional forms of carceral modernity and how such practices scale relations by naturalizing the logic of scalar hierarchies underpinning racial capitalism. By showing how representations of the captive child critique the entrenched logic undergirding colonial power, Brady challenges racialized modes of citizenship while offering visions for living beyond borders.

Chicano Movement For Beginners

Chicano Movement For Beginners
Author: Maceo Montoya
Publisher: Red Wheel/Weiser
Total Pages: 226
Release: 2016-09-13
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1939994659

As the heyday of the Chicano Movement of the late 1960s to early 70s fades further into history and as more and more of its important figures pass on, so too does knowledge of its significance. Thus, Chicano Movement For Beginners is an important attempt to stave off historical amnesia. It seeks to shed light on the multifaceted civil rights struggle known as “El Movimiento” that galvanized the Mexican American community, from laborers to student activists, giving them not only a political voice to combat prejudice and inequality, but also a new sense of cultural awareness and ethnic pride. Beyond commemorating the past, Chicano Movement For Beginners seeks to reaffirm the goals and spirit of the Chicano Movement for the simple reason that many of the critical issues Mexican American activists first brought to the nation’s attention then—educational disadvantage, endemic poverty, political exclusion, and social bias—remain as pervasive as ever almost half a century later.

Preparatory Notes for Future Masterpieces

Preparatory Notes for Future Masterpieces
Author: Maceo Montoya
Publisher: University of Nevada Press
Total Pages: 415
Release: 2021-04-27
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1647790018

Selected as one of the San Francisco Chronicles' 15 best books of 2021 From critically acclaimed author Maceo Montoya comes an inventive and adventurous satirical novel about a Mexican-American artist’s efforts to fulfill his vision: to paint masterful works of art. His plans include a move to Paris to join the ranks of his artistic hero, Gustave Courbet—except it’s 1943, and he’s stuck in the backwoods of New Mexico. Penniless and prone to epileptic fits, even his mother thinks he’s crazy. Ernie Lobato has just inherited his deceased uncle’s manuscript and drawings. At the urging of his colleague, an activist and history buff (Lorraine Rios), Ernie sends the materials to a professor of Chicanx literature (Dr. Samuel Pizarro). Throughout the novel, Dr. Pizarro shares his insights and comments on the uncle’s legacy in a series of annotations to his text and illustrations. As Ernie’s uncle battles a world that is unkind to “starving artists,” he runs into other tormented twentieth-century artists, writers, and activists with ambitions to match his own: a young itinerant preacher (Reies López Tijerina); the “greatest insane artist” (Martín Ramirez); and Oscar Zeta Acosta who is hellbent on self-destruction. Will the fortuitous encounters with these prophetic figures result in his own genius being recognized? Or will his uncompromising nature consign him to what he fears most? Told through a combination of words and images in the tradition of classic works such as Don Quixote and Alice in Wonderland, Preparatory Notes for Future Masterpieces features fifty-one vivid black-and-white pen drawings. This complex and engaging story also doubles as literary criticism, commenting on how outsiders’ stories fit into the larger context of the Chicanx literary canon. A unique and multilayered story that embraces both contradiction and possibility, it also sheds new light on the current state of Chicanx literature while, at the same time, contributing to it. Propulsive, humorous, and full of life, this candid novel will be loved not only by Beat fiction fans but by contemporary fiction lovers as well.

Visible Borders, Invisible Economies

Visible Borders, Invisible Economies
Author: Kristy L. Ulibarri
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Total Pages: 283
Release: 2022-11-22
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 147732657X

A thorough examination of the political and economic exploitation of Latinx subjects, migrants, and workers through the lens of Latinx literature, photography, and film.

You Must Fight Them

You Must Fight Them
Author: Maceo Montoya
Publisher: UNM Press
Total Pages: 158
Release: 2015-09-15
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0826345891

In the novella You Must Fight Them, a short, bookish half-Mexican doctoral student returns to his hometown of Woodland, California, and tries to reconnect with Lupita Valdez, the girl he worshipped in high school. But in order to date Lupita, he must first fight her three hulking brothers. Attempting to make sense of his unusual predicament, he ruminates on his many insecurities—his definition of manhood and the ambiguities of his mixed-race identity. In this collection we meet characters navigating the difficult situations that arise when different worlds collide, from a professor teaching a course on Latino gangs who makes the unwise decision to invite two former rival gang members as guest lecturers, to an artist threatened by the twin sons of his poor white neighbor. Though this memorable cast of characters faces unique quandaries—and deals with these problems in questionable ways—their stories are driven by a desire to set the record straight.

The Scoundrel and the Optimist

The Scoundrel and the Optimist
Author: Maceo Montoya
Publisher: Bilingual Review Press
Total Pages: 266
Release: 2010
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781931010658

Filastro is a bully, used to beating up his wife, six of their seven children, and the riffraff of his village in Mexico. But he can't bring himself to harm his youngest son, Edmund, whose limbs resemble sticks and whose head seems too big for his puny body. The older children, who loathe their father, escape him by fleeing to the United States, and Edmund, who is fixated on an indifferent Ingrid Genera and yearns to learn the guitar in order to serenade her, is the only child left at home. In the wake of a drunken episode, Filastro is tortured and eventually crippled by a stranger. His wife moves out of the house, and the irrepressible Edmund, who lobbies in vain for his mother to come home, becomes his father's caregiver. In a desperate attempt to win back his wife, Filastro braves crossing the Rio Grande to beseech the forgiveness of each of his six children scattered across America.

American Quasar

American Quasar
Author: David Campos
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2021
Genre: American poetry
ISBN: 9781597098724

American Quasar, a visual-textual collaboration, addresses personal and political trauma, the emotional craters left by family, and the ways in which one learns to love not only as son, brother, student, or lover, but from the space one occupies as citizen."

The Iguana Killer

The Iguana Killer
Author: Alberto Ríos
Publisher: UNM Press
Total Pages: 132
Release: 1998
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780826319227

Set along the Southwestern border, these stories explore growing up Hispanic and weaving together three distinct worlds--Mexico, the United States, and childhood.

La Mollie and the King of Tears

La Mollie and the King of Tears
Author: Arturo Islas
Publisher: UNM Press
Total Pages: 212
Release: 1996
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780826317322

A posthumous novel by the pioneering Chicano fiction writer--a tragi-comic tale revealing a new side to Arturo Islas's talent.