Allende el mar Óscar Osorio

Main Article Content

Aldona Bialowas Pobutsky

Abstract

Migration occupies a central role in global debates, as people cross oceans and continents en masse, risking their lives for a better future. Óscar Osorio’s Allende el mar is thus a particularly timely contribution to contemporary dialogues on human movements, wars, national borders, otherness, social inequalities, the heterogeneity of human experience and its actual oneness despite divisive politics on race and nationalism.

Article Details

Section
Reviews
Author Biography

Aldona Bialowas Pobutsky, Oakland University

Professor of Spanish at Oakland University, Michigan, and Associate Editor of Studies in Latin American Popular Culture. She is the author of Pablo Escobar and Narcoculture (UP Florida, 2020). Her articles on drug trafficking, violence in Latin America and gender have appeared in Hispania, Hispanófila, Revista Iberoamericana, Espéculo, Hispanic Journal, Letras Hispanas, Studies in Latin American Popular Culture, Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hispánicos, Letras Femeninas, Romance Notes, Ciberletras, Texto Crítico, Confluencia, Alter/nativas, and Chasqui.