Jason A. Bartles is an associate professor at West Chester University. He received his BA from Gettysburg College and his MA and PhD in Latin American Literatures and Cultures from the University of Maryland, College Park. His research explores the political, aesthetic, and ethical discourses that restore the possibilities for utopian thinking in the fiction and essays of twentieth and twenty-first century Latin American and Latinx writers. He has published articles in Aztlán, Revista Iberoamericana, Variaciones Borges, Revista Hispánica Moderna, and Revista de Estudios Hispánicos. His fiction has appeared in Punchnel's, Here Comes Everyone, Boned, The Metaworker, and in the collection, My Utopia, at Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: ArteletrA al vesre
PART ONE: The Itinerary of Errant Palindromes
Chapter One: On Errant Palindromes
Chapter Two: On Going Unnoticed
Chapter Three: On Unattended Details
PART TWO: The Politics of Going Unnoticed
Chapter Four: A Double Negative in Cuba
Chapter Five: An Errant Allegory in Argentina
Chapter Six: A Nude Woman in Uruguay
PART THREE: The Aesthetics of Writing in Plain Sight
Chapter Seven: ¡Ay, epopeyA!; or, Filloy's Gauchos at the Origins
Chapter Eight: ¡Sometamos o matemoS!; or, Somers's Mandrake Syndrome
Chapter Nine: Supuso su puS; or, Casey's Wasted Narratives
PART FOUR: The Ethics of Being Perceived
Chapter Ten: Exposure through Dialogues
Chapter Eleven: From Monodialogues to Pandemonium
Chapter Twelve: Aiding the Adversary
Conclusion: Re-ves la ArteletrA
Notes
Works Cited
Index