Maurice Echeverría’s Labios: A Disenchanted Story about Lesbians in Guatemala’s Postwar Reality

In the last two decades, lesbian, gay, and queer literary studies have gained significant ground in the broader field of Latin American cultural studies. Within this growing body of critical work, however, the Central American region and its literature have been largely ignored. This article, which...

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Main Author: Yajaira M. Padilla
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: New Prairie Press 2013-06-01
Series:Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
Online Access:http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol37/iss2/10
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spelling doaj-a58aede57ffe4f3396f7231519bce47e2020-11-24T23:32:28ZengNew Prairie PressStudies in 20th & 21st Century Literature2334-44152013-06-0137210.4148/2334-4415.18105766808Maurice Echeverría’s Labios: A Disenchanted Story about Lesbians in Guatemala’s Postwar RealityYajaira M. PadillaIn the last two decades, lesbian, gay, and queer literary studies have gained significant ground in the broader field of Latin American cultural studies. Within this growing body of critical work, however, the Central American region and its literature have been largely ignored. This article, which focuses on the representation of lesbians and queer desire in the Guatemalan novel Labios (2004) ‘Lips’ by Maurice Echeverría, seeks to contribute to such a lack in Central American perspective. This essay contends, Echeverría’s text, one of a growing number of recent Central American narratives to call attention to and portray gay, lesbian, and/or transgender individuals and their experiences, evinces an alternate and composite form of visibility that can be understood as a visibilidad cosmo-queer . This visibility is an expression of the complex social reality of sexual minorities in postwar Guatemala, one marked by global or cosmopolitan discourses of gay and lesbian identity politics as well as queer modes of self-definition that challenge those same dominant discourses.http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol37/iss2/10
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yajaira M. Padilla
spellingShingle Yajaira M. Padilla
Maurice Echeverría’s Labios: A Disenchanted Story about Lesbians in Guatemala’s Postwar Reality
Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
author_facet Yajaira M. Padilla
author_sort Yajaira M. Padilla
title Maurice Echeverría’s Labios: A Disenchanted Story about Lesbians in Guatemala’s Postwar Reality
title_short Maurice Echeverría’s Labios: A Disenchanted Story about Lesbians in Guatemala’s Postwar Reality
title_full Maurice Echeverría’s Labios: A Disenchanted Story about Lesbians in Guatemala’s Postwar Reality
title_fullStr Maurice Echeverría’s Labios: A Disenchanted Story about Lesbians in Guatemala’s Postwar Reality
title_full_unstemmed Maurice Echeverría’s Labios: A Disenchanted Story about Lesbians in Guatemala’s Postwar Reality
title_sort maurice echeverría’s labios: a disenchanted story about lesbians in guatemala’s postwar reality
publisher New Prairie Press
series Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
issn 2334-4415
publishDate 2013-06-01
description In the last two decades, lesbian, gay, and queer literary studies have gained significant ground in the broader field of Latin American cultural studies. Within this growing body of critical work, however, the Central American region and its literature have been largely ignored. This article, which focuses on the representation of lesbians and queer desire in the Guatemalan novel Labios (2004) ‘Lips’ by Maurice Echeverría, seeks to contribute to such a lack in Central American perspective. This essay contends, Echeverría’s text, one of a growing number of recent Central American narratives to call attention to and portray gay, lesbian, and/or transgender individuals and their experiences, evinces an alternate and composite form of visibility that can be understood as a visibilidad cosmo-queer . This visibility is an expression of the complex social reality of sexual minorities in postwar Guatemala, one marked by global or cosmopolitan discourses of gay and lesbian identity politics as well as queer modes of self-definition that challenge those same dominant discourses.
url http://newprairiepress.org/sttcl/vol37/iss2/10
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