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January 2010

6 x 9 in.
332 pp., 31 b&w illus.

ISBN: 978-0-292-71960-6
$60.00, hardcover, no dust jacket
33% website discount: $40.20
Not yet published; available for pre-order

ISBN: 978-0-292-71961-3
$24.95, paperback
33% website discount: $16.72
Not yet published; available for pre-order

 
 
 
     

La Pinta
Chicana/o Prisoner Literature, Culture, and Politics

By B. V. Olguín

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

In this groundbreaking study based on archival research about Chicana and Chicano prisoners—known as Pintas and Pintos—as well as fresh interpretations of works by renowned Pinta and Pinto authors and activists, B. V. Olguín provides crucial insights into the central roles that incarceration and the incarcerated have played in the evolution of Chicana/o history, cultural paradigms, and oppositional political praxis.

This is the first text on prisoners in general, and Chicana/o and Latina/o prisoners in particular, that provides a range of case studies from the nineteenth century to the present. Olguín places multiple approaches in dialogue through the pairing of representational figures in the history of Chicana/o incarceration with specific themes and topics. Case studies on the first nineteenth-century Chicana prisoner in San Quentin State Prison, Modesta Avila; renowned late-twentieth-century Chicano poets Raúl Salinas, Ricardo Sánchez, and Jimmy Santiago Baca; lesser-known Chicana pinta and author Judy Lucero; and infamous Chicano drug baron and social bandit Fred Gómez Carrasco are aligned with themes from popular culture such as prisoner tattoo art and handkerchief art, Hollywood Chicana/o gangxploitation and the prisoner film American Me, and prisoner education projects.

Olguín provides a refreshing critical interrogation of Chicana/o subaltern agency, which too often is celebrated as unambiguously resistant and oppositional. As such, this study challenges long-held presumptions about Chicana/o cultures of resistance and proposes important explorations of the complex and contradictory relationship between Chicana/o agency and ideology.

B. V. Olguín is Associate Professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of Texas at San Antonio. He is a poet and co-translator, with Omar Vasquez Barboza, of Cantos de Adolescencia/Songs of Youth by Américo Paredes.


 Of Related Interest Díaz-Cotto, Chicana Lives and Criminal Justice
López and Pérez-Torres, To Alcatraz, Death Row, and Back
Salinas, raúlrsalinas and the Jail Machine

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