Drug Lords, Cowboys, and Desperadoes: Violent Myths of the U.S.-Mexico Frontier
Drug Lords, Cowboys, and Desperadoes examines how historical archetypes in violent narratives on the Mexican American frontier have resulted in political discourse that feeds back into real violence. The drug battles, outlaw culture, and violence that permeate the U.S.-Mexican frontier serve as scen...
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Zusammenfassung: | Drug Lords, Cowboys, and Desperadoes examines
how historical archetypes in violent narratives on the Mexican
American frontier have resulted in political discourse that feeds
back into real violence.
The drug battles, outlaw culture, and violence that permeate the
U.S.-Mexican frontier serve as scenery and motivation for a wide
swath of North American culture. In this innovative study, Rafael
Acosta Morales ties the pride that many communities felt for heroic
tales of banditry and rebels to the darker repercussions of the
violence inflicted by the representatives of the law or the state.
Narratives on bandits, cowboys, and desperadoes promise
redistribution, regeneration, and community, but they often bring
about the very opposite of those goals. This paradox is at the
heart of Acosta Morales's book.
Drug Lords, Cowboys, and Desperadoes examines the
relationship between affect, narrative, and violence surrounding
three historical archetypes-social bandits (often associated with
the drug trade), cowboys, and desperadoes-and how these narratives
create affective loops that recreate violent structures in the
Mexican American frontier. Acosta Morales analyzes narrative in
literary, cinematic, and musical form, examining works by Américo
Paredes, Luis G. Inclán, Clint Eastwood, Rolando Hinojosa, Yuri
Herrera, and Cormac McCarthy. The book focuses on how narratives of
Mexican social banditry become incorporated into the social order
that bandits rose against and how representations of violence in
the U.S. weaponize narratives of trauma in order to justify and
expand the violence that cowboys commit. Finally, it explains the
usage of universality under the law as a means of criminalizing
minorities by reading the stories of Mexican American men who were
turned into desperadoes by the criminal law system.
Drug Lords, Cowboys, and Desperadoes demonstrates how
these stories led to recreated violence and criminalization of
minorities, a conversation especially important during this time of
recognizing social inequality and social injustices. The book is
part of a growing body of scholarship that applies theoretical
approaches to borderlands studies, and it will be of interest to
students and scholars in American and Mexican history and
literature, border studies, literary criticism, cultural criticism,
and related fields. |
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DOI: | 10.2307/j.ctv19m61jw |