Imagining the U.S.-Mexico Drug War: The Critical Limits of Narconarratives

被引:24
|
作者
Zavala, Oswaldo [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] CUNY Coll Staten Isl, Staten Isl, NY 10314 USA
[2] CUNY, Grad Ctr, New York, NY USA
关键词
Drug cartels; Mexico; Mimesis; Narconarratives; Violence;
D O I
10.1215/00104124-2764088
中图分类号
I [文学];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
In the last decade, violence attributed to Latin American drug cartels has become a common theme In a proliferation of fiction and non-fiction about the drug trade written both in Mexico and the U.S. This essay shows how the majority of Mexican narconarratives-in particular the works of writers such as Orfa Alarcon, Yuri Herrera, Elmer Mendoza, Heriberto Yepez, and Juan Pablo Villalobos-while conceived as critical literary interventions, are in fact marketable commodities reproducing hegemonic discourses that frame the drug trade as a phenomenon operating outside of the state. Mexican narconarratives reify a mythology of drug cartels and their kingpins: that the violence threatening the country is attributable only to narcos, who radically oppose civil society and its government. However, there is an emerging current of narconarratives that articulate an effective critique of the drug trade as a dimension located within state structures, historically determined by state power and subject to it. The novels analyzed include Contrabando (Contraband) by Mexican author Victor Hugo Rascdn Banda, 2666 by Chilean author Roberto Bolano, and The Power of the Dog and Down by the River by U.S. writers Don Winslow and Charles Bowden, respectively. Reconsidering the classical notion of mimesis, this essay contends that, despite their varying proximity to their common referent-the drug trade -and their differing practices of realism, most narconarratives replicate official representations of drug cartels. It is through a critical approach to the drug trade, as it intersects the power of the state, that alternative narconarratives resist the mediation of hegemonic discourses that permeate the fields of journalism, academic research, and literature. © 2014 by University of Oregon.
引用
收藏
页码:340 / 360
页数:21
相关论文
共 27 条
  • [21] Income inequality and violent crime: Evidence from Mexico's drug war
    Enamorado, Ted
    Lopez-Calva, Luis F.
    Rodriguez-Castelan, Carlos
    Winkler, Hernan
    JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2016, 120 : 128 - 143
  • [22] Media effects on public displays of brutality: the case of Mexico's drug war
    Rios, Viridiana
    Rivera, Johanna
    POLITICS GROUPS AND IDENTITIES, 2019, 7 (01) : 194 - 206
  • [23] The Mexico 's Experiences During the War against Drug Trafficking 2006- 2012
    Bolanos Vazquez, Carlos Agustin
    URVIO-REVISTA LATINOAMERICANA DE ESTUDIOS DE SEGURIDAD, 2014, (15): : 27 - 40
  • [24] The problem of criminal charisma: State authority and the politics of narcocultura in Mexico's drug war
    Mondragon-Celis, Agnes
    AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, 2024, 126 (04) : 581 - 595
  • [25] Deportation Along the U.S.–Mexico Border: Its Relation to Drug Use Patterns and Accessing Care
    K. C. Brouwer
    R. Lozada
    W. A. Cornelius
    M. Firestone Cruz
    C. Magis-Rodríguez
    M. L. Zúñiga de Nuncio
    S. A. Strathdee
    Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, 2009, 11 : 1 - 6
  • [26] Security, Migration, and the Economy in the Texas-Tamaulipas Border Region: The "Real" Effects of Mexico's Drug War
    Correa-Cabrera, Guadalupe
    POLITICS & POLICY, 2013, 41 (01) : 65 - 82
  • [27] The Mexican Drug War and the Consequent Population Exodus: Transnational Movement at the U. S.-Mexican Border
    Morales, Maria Cristina
    Morales, Oscar
    Menchaca, Angelica C.
    Sebastian, Adam
    SOCIETIES, 2013, 3 (01) : 80 - 103