Magical Habits – Monica Herta
Author: Monica Huerta
Publisher: Duke University Press
Year of Publication: 2021
Print Length: 194 pages
Genre: Non-Fiction / Cultural Studies
Topic: Culture & Society, Family
In Magical Habits Monica Huerta draws on her experiences growing up in her family’s Mexican restaurants and her life as a scholar of literature and culture to meditate on how relationships among self, place, race, and storytelling contend with both the afterlives of history and racial capitalism.
Whether dwelling on mundane aspects of everyday life, such as the smell of old kitchen grease, or grappling with the thorny, unsatisfying question of authenticity, Huerta stages a dynamic conversation among genres, voices, and archives: personal and critical essays exist alongside a fairy tale; photographs and restaurant menus complement fictional monologues based on her family’s history.
Developing a new mode of criticism through storytelling, Huerta takes readers through Cook County courtrooms, the Cristero Rebellion (in which her great-grandfather was martyred by the Mexican government), Japanese baths in San Francisco—and a little bit about Chaucer too. Ultimately, Huerta sketches out habits of living while thinking that allow us to consider what it means to live with and try to peer beyond history even as we are caught up in the middle of it.
Table of Contents
Author’s Note /
Preface: A Patron Saint
1. The Synthesis Problem
2. Fabulation
1988
3. Disciplines and Disciples
4. Aphorism as a Promise
2002
5. Heartbreak as Praxis
6. Whether Wisdom
2004
The Quene A Mervilos and Magiquall Tale of epistemological Mischief, Wherein there are revealed no secretes
2006
8. When Courts of Love Have Cash Registers
1976
9. Auctions
10. Uncertainty and Bathing
2010
2013
11. After Hypervigilance
2017
12. Choreography
Acknowledgments
SELECTED Bibliography
1. The Synthesis Problem
2. Fabulation
1988
3. Disciplines and Disciples
4. Aphorism as a Promise
2002
5. Heartbreak as Praxis
6. Whether Wisdom
2004
7. Before and After
2006
8. When Courts of Love Have Cash Registers
1976
9. Auctions
10. Uncertainty and Bathing
2010
11. After Hypervigilance
2017
12. Choreography
Acknowledgments
Notes
Monica Huerta is a critic, curator, scholar, and editor. She works across mediums to amplify freer futures and the courage to make them real. Alongside visionary makers, she learns from minoritarian histories of sensing the world otherwise to unearth new possibilities in the present. Her current projects explore contemporary Latinx photography, anti-capitalist fairy tales, and the art of sports. Essays appear in ArtForum, Society + Space, Intervenxions, Los Angeles Review of Books, Contemporaries, Women & Performance, and many peer-reviewed academic journals.
Source: https://english.princeton.edu/people/monica-huerta
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