Decolonial Topophilia: Nature, Place, and History in Puerto Rican Poetry

Víctor Figueroa
Skip to product information

Decolonial Topophilia: Nature, Place, and History in Puerto Rican Poetry

Víctor Figueroa
Release date:
Regular price $60.95
Sale price $60.95 Regular price $0.00
Final Sale. No returns or exchanges.
Oversized: This item will be shipped by appointment through our delivery partner.
Overweight: This item will be shipped by appointment through our delivery partner.

Digital download

Immediate access in your Kobo library

Deliver to

Arrives on

Buy online, pick up at Bay & Floor

Free pick up today

Find it in store

Out of stock

Found in: Arts & Letters, Drama

Earn 305 plum points and save more with plum Rewards. Learn more

View full details

Overview

254 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details

?In this consistently insightful, well-researched, and well-written study of four major Puerto Rican poets of the early twentieth century, Víctor Figueroa convincingly demonstrates in his words, ?how a single island?s history and ultimate destiny is inextricably entangled with global histories and planetary hopes for liberation?a liberation that must . . . [include] the well-being of both human beings and their other-than-human places and companions.? Such a study of Puerto Rico is long overdue for the insights the island?s literature can offer to the environmental humanities. Decolonial Topophilia is smart, clear, and important scholarship that advances our understanding of the complexities and risks of what it means to love a place even as it rightly insists on its indispensability for the future.?

- George B. Handley - coeditor of Postcolonial Ecologies: Literatures of the Environment
  • Published date: Sep 08, 2026
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 254
  • Publisher: Bucknell University Press
  • ISBN: 9781684486083
  • Dimensions: 6.0" W x 1.0" L x 9.0" H

VÍCTOR FIGUEROA is a professor of Spanish at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. His publications include Not at Home in One?s Home: Caribbean Self-Fashioning in the Poetry of Luis Palés Matos, Aimé Césaire, and Derek Walcott and Prophetic Visions of the Past: Pan-Caribbean Representations of the Haitian Revolution, as well as three poetry collections and articles in scholarly journals.

Recently Viewed