CFP: Latinx Detective Fiction

Publication
A Browner Shade of Noir: Latinx Detective and Mystery Narratives in Literature and Popular Culture
Special Issue on Latinx Detective Fiction
DIÁLOGO: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Latinx and Latin American Studies
Stichtag: 01.01.2020

Diálogo invites authors to submit manuscripts for a special issue dedicated to Latinx Detective Fiction. We are looking for essays that explore how detective, noir, hardboiled, and mystery narratives add to a range of questions about power in relation to Latinx identities and cultures in the 21st century. At the intersections of race, class, gender, sexuality, national identity, and ability, this special issue will feature analyses of works that challenge, rewrite, and sometimes ignore completely the popular scripts of white, heteromasculine anti/heroism in which these genres are often grounded. For many Latinx authors, detective narratives appear to offer an outsider perspective (what Ralph E. Rodriguez refers to as „alienated eyes“) from which to imagine and articulate more inclusive forms of belonging and political agency. Contributors to this special issue are encouraged (but not required) to consider the following questions:

  • Why do writers and filmmakers continue to produce works in these genres and why do they remain so popular with audiences? How do these genres change (or do they change?) to accommodate Latinx narratives?
  • What is at stake when Latinx narratives of alienation move from focusing on “private eyes/I’s” to imagining “collective we’s”?
  • When and to what extent do Latinx detective narratives offer audiences a glimpse through “collective eyes” (or from “collectivized” perspectives)?
  • Do representations of power and violence in these genres resonate differently in the hands of Latinx characters, authors, directors, etc.? If so, why?
  • What do we gain and what might we lose when we read Latinx authors as disruptive voices within these genres?

We are interested in essays on Latinx authors and Latin American authors who write in and on the boundaries of these genres. We are also interested in essays about detective/noir films, television shows, graphic novels, and/or video games.

Timeline: Please submit a 250-500 word proposal by January 1, 2020. If accepted, final text of the article length piece will be expected in late April 2020. Please submit proposals directly to all editors of the special issue: Jose Navarro (jnavar17@calpoly.edu), Michael Cucher (cucher.michael@gmail.com) and William Arce (warce@csufresno.edu).

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