From the Publisher
“This book is a hopeful one in its recuperation of the multiple practices of collective and creative resistance that oppose and persist during the neocolonial war in contemporary Mexico. Diego Rivera Hernández has composed with sensitivity a comprehensive mosaic of fiction and non-fiction texts of various genres, which are criss-crossed by the voices of migrants, journalists, and victims of extreme violence, all of whom have become this country’s moral conscience. Without straying from critical analysis, the author has produced a book against amnesia, as it reminds us that memory contains the seeds of a fairer horizon.” (Carolina Robledo Silvestre, Conacyt-CIESAS Mexico City)
“In Narratives of Vulnerability in Mexico’s War on Drugs, Raúl Diego Rivera Hernández explores alternative ways of articulating the dominant narratives of the ‘War on Drugs’ promulgated by the United States in the early 1970s that unleashed violence both on Afro-Americans in the U.S. and on communities throughout Latin America. By focusing on the ongoing migrations, disappearances, and human rights violations precipitated by the ongoing ‘war’ that covers for rapacious neoliberalism, this book tells another, necessary story. Beautifully written and meticulously researched, this is essential reading for those concerned with the urgent issues of hemispheric migration and human rights.” (Diana Taylor, Professor of Performance Studies and Spanish, New York University, USA)
“Narratives of Vulnerability in Mexico’s War on Drugs stands apart from a recent wave of academic books on organized crime and anti-drug policy by exploring the often-overlooked potential for political engagement and resistance of those most vulnerable to the country’s unprecedented violence: migrants, journalists and activists. Through a convincing multidisciplinary examination of literary works, journalistic chronicles and documentary film, Diego Rivera Hernández goes beyond the reiterative approaches to “narcoculture” and its mythology of “cartels,” “jefes” and “sicarios.” Instead, his book sheds light on empowered victims that become political subjects as they confront the complex crisis of human rights framed by the militarization of the shared “national security” agenda propelled by both the U.S. and Mexican governments. This is a thoughtful investigation about the ability of courageous people to reject reductive narratives of victimization and counteract the horrors of state violence, transnational crime and precarity by mobilizing to enact social change and seek transitional justice.” (Oswaldo Zavala, City University of New York, USA author of Los cárteles no existen. Narcotráfico y cultura en México)