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Contributors

Contributors José F. Aranda, Jr., is the author of When We A rrive : A Literary H istory o f Mexican Am erica (U niversity o f Arizona, 2003). He has begun w o rk on his next book, ten ta tively title d The Places o f M o d e rn ity in Early Mexican Am erican Literature, 1848-1960. John L. Escobedo is an assistant professor o f English at the U niversity o f Colorado at Boulder. His specialization focuses on mestizaje and its effect on interpretations of race cate­ gorization, the developm ent o f hybrid theories, and nationalist identity form atio n in Chicano/a and U.S. Latino/a literature. In addition, his w o rk actively engages in a com parative approach tow ard literature to h ig h lig h t the interconnectedness o f Chicano/Latino literature w ith other U.S. m in o rity literatures. Elisabeth R. Friedman is a doctoral candidate in Social & Political Thought at York U niversity inToronto. She is com pleting a dissertation titled "Im ag ina tive Archives: Virtual M em ory and the Dilemmas o f Holocaust Representation," which examines the status o f the archive in http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png English Language Notes Duke University Press

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Copyright
Copyright © 2007 Regents of the University of Colorado
ISSN
0013-8282
eISSN
2573-3575
DOI
10.1215/00138282-45.1.161
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

José F. Aranda, Jr., is the author of When We A rrive : A Literary H istory o f Mexican Am erica (U niversity o f Arizona, 2003). He has begun w o rk on his next book, ten ta tively title d The Places o f M o d e rn ity in Early Mexican Am erican Literature, 1848-1960. John L. Escobedo is an assistant professor o f English at the U niversity o f Colorado at Boulder. His specialization focuses on mestizaje and its effect on interpretations of race cate­ gorization, the developm ent o f hybrid theories, and nationalist identity form atio n in Chicano/a and U.S. Latino/a literature. In addition, his w o rk actively engages in a com parative approach tow ard literature to h ig h lig h t the interconnectedness o f Chicano/Latino literature w ith other U.S. m in o rity literatures. Elisabeth R. Friedman is a doctoral candidate in Social & Political Thought at York U niversity inToronto. She is com pleting a dissertation titled "Im ag ina tive Archives: Virtual M em ory and the Dilemmas o f Holocaust Representation," which examines the status o f the archive in

Journal

English Language NotesDuke University Press

Published: Mar 1, 2007

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