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El. knyga: Nerds, Goths, Geeks, and Freaks: Outsiders in Chicanx and Latinx Young Adult Literature

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Contributions by Carolina Alonso, Elena Avil's, Trevor Boffone, Christi Cook, Ella Diaz, Amanda Ellis, Cristina Herrera, Guadalupe Garcķa McCall, Domino Renee Pérez, Adrianna M. Santos, Roxanne Schroeder-Arce, Lettycia Terrones, and Tim Wadham In Nerds, Goths, Geeks, and Freaks: Outsiders in Chicanx and Latinx Young Adult Literature, the outsider intersects with discussions of race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality. The essays in this volume address questions of outsider identities and how these identities are shaped by mainstream myths around Chicanx and Latinx young people, particularly with the common stereotype of the struggling, underachieving inner-city teens.

Contributors also grapple with how young adults reclaim what it means to be an outsider, weirdo, nerd, or goth, and how the reclamation of these marginalized identities expand conversations around authenticity and narrow understandings of what constitutes cultural identity.

Included are analysis of such texts as I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter, Shadowshaper, Swimming While Drowning, and others. Addressed in the essays are themes of outsiders in Chicanx/Latinx children's and young adult literature, and the contributors insist that to understand Latinx youth identities it is necessary to shed light on outsiders within an already marginalized ethnic group: nerds, goths, geeks, freaks, and others who might not fit within such Latinx popular cultural paradigms as the chola and cholo, identities that are ever-present in films, television, and the internet.
Foreword ix
Guadalupe Garcia Mccall
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Weirding Out Latinx America 3(12)
Trevor Boffone
Cristina Herrera
Section 1 Artists and Punks
1 Chicana Teens, Zines, and Poetry Scenes: Gabi, A Girl in Pieces by Isabel Quintero
15(16)
Amanda Ellis
2 Praxis of Refusal: Self-Fashioning Identity and Throwing Attitude in Perez's The First Rule of Punk
31(14)
Lettycia Terrones
3 Broken Open: Writing, Healing, and Affirmation in Isabel Quintero's Gabi, A Girl in Pieces and Erika L. Sanchez's I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter
45(18)
Adrianna M. Santos
Section 2 Superheroes and Other Worldly Beings
4 Bite Me: The Allure of Vampires and Dark Magic in Chicana Young Adult Literature
63(11)
Christi Cook
5 Afuerxs and Cultural Practice in Shadowshaper and Labyrinth Lost
74(14)
Domino Perez
6 The Art of Afro-Latina Consciousness in Shadowshaper
88(17)
Ella Diaz
Section 3 LatiNerds and Bookworms
7 The Smartest Girl in the World: Normalizing Intellectualism through Representations of Smart Latinx Youth on Stage
105(11)
Roxanne Schroeder-Arce
8 "These Latin Girls Mean Business": Expanding the Boundaries of Latina Youth Identity in Meg Medina's YA Novel, Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass
116(14)
Cristina Herrera
9 Tomas Rivera: The Original Latinx Outsider
130(15)
Tim Wadham
Section 4 Non-Cholos in the Hood
10 Young, Gay, and Latino: "Feeling Brown" in Emilio Rodriguez's Swimming While Drowning
145(14)
Trevor Boffone
11 What Can We Learn from Cool Cats?: Chillante Pedagogy, Gary Soto, and the Chato Series
159(16)
Elena Aviles
12 The Coming-of-Age Experience in Chicanx Queer Novels What Night Brings and Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe
175(16)
Carolina Alonso
List of Contributors 191(6)
Index 197
Trevor Boffone is lecturer in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program at the University of Houston and the founder of the 50 Playwrights Project. He is the coeditor of Encuentro: Latinx Performance for the New American Theater.

Cristina Herrera is professor and chair of Chicano and Latin American Studies at California State University, Fresno. She is author of Contemporary Chicana Literature: (Re)Writing the Maternal Script.