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Decolonizing Queer Time: A Critique of Anachronism in Latin@ Writings

Abstract

While the term Latin@ is untraceable to any coherent referent in terms of geographical or epistemic origin (Rodríguez 2014Rodríguez, Juana Maria. “Latino, Latina, Latin@.” Keywords for American Cultural Studies . Second Edition. Edited by Bruce Brugett and Glenn Hendler. New York: New York University Press, 2014. 146-49.), still it denotes a very stable referent when it comes to geographical destination - the USA being the central migratory destiny shaped by and shaping identity shifts and epistemic positions variously associated with Latin America. As much as this narrative determinacy is the effect of global power asymmetries, it also tends to naturalize them by couching migration in evolutionist terms that anachronize struggles against displacement, deterritorialization, and dispossession. The field of Latin@ literature and criticism therefore becomes an effective locus from which the ongoing historical conflicts elided by those narratives can be creatively recalled and reconfigured. This article reflects on the temporal borderlands as a critical paradigm for reconfiguring narratives of straight temporality within Latin@ texts.

Keywords:
Latin@ Studies; Anachronism; Racialization; Temporal Borderlands; Decolonization

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