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Postborder City: Cultural Spaces of Bajalta California. Michael Dear and Gustavo Leclerc, eds. London and New York: Routledge From the Annals of the Association of American Geographers
In this volume, editors Michael Dear and Gustavo Leclerc tackle one of
the key issues for border scholars today. In brief, they question the
nature of the relationship between
the paradoxical space of the borderlands between Mexico and the United
StatesFa space that becomes ever more traversed, open, and fluid, yet
simultaneously clamps down, walls up, and becomes ever more
impermeableFand the multiplicity of artistic representations,
experiences, and performances about and on that paradoxical space. The
volumes contributors root their explorations in what the editors term
Bajalta California, a transborder region comprised of Southern
California in the United States (Alta California) and the northern part
the Mexican state of Baja California. In coining this regional
neologism the editors underscore the historical and contemporary union
of this space made two by an artificial but powerful international
border.
The contributions focus particularly on the urban areas of Los Angeles,
San Diego, Tijuana, and Mexicali, lending the volume a particular
flavor, given the West Coast twist on cultural (and most other)
production arising here, as contrasted to points farther east along the
border.
The editors make the intriguing but somewhat dubious claim that these
four urban areas have coalesced spatially and culturally to the point
that they now form one of the planets most important world cities. .
. . the prototypical postmodern border metropolis (p. xii, emphasis
in the original). If this is taken as the conceptual point of
departure, howeverFand it isFthen the cultural production arising from
and on this space is of paramount importance for understanding what the
editors term the postborder condition, a localized but suggestive
harbinger of a more general post-border existence on the horizon.
This volume consists of an introduction and nine chapters organized
into three sections. The introduction by Dear and Leclerc focuses on
the complex relationship between place and art, proposing that a form
of cultural production which they term postborder art constitutes
a new cultural aesthetic being created in the in-between spaces, and
manufactured from the archaeologies of past and emerging identities
(p. 14, emphasis in the original). The introduction concludes with an
insightful discussion of pieces displayed at the exhibit Mixed
Feelings: Art and Culture in the Postborder Metropolis/Sentimientos
Contradictorios: Arte y Cultura en la Metro´polis Posfronteriza, held
at the Fisher Gallerey of the University of Southern California in
2002. Color plates of the pieces discussed are included.
The first section, Regional Groundedness, includes contributions by
the well-known Mexican author and cultural critic Carlos Monsiva´is, a
chapter coauthored by Phoebe S. Kropp and Michael Dear, and a piece by
He´ctor Manuel Lucero. In typical Monsiva´is style, the writing in the
first chapter is lyrical, provocative, and at times polemical.
Monsiva´is traces the journey north to border cities on the Mexican
side, and then onward to the shimmering promised land of Los Angeles, a
journey made in the flesh by many Mexicans and in the desires of all,
and one that traverses a path of surprises, disappointments, and
flashes of beautiful insight. The next two chapters, Peopling Alta
California and Peopling Baja California, respectively, shift
gears to focus on the historical details of the settlement of the two
Californias. The careful, rich overview of the demographic changes in
these long-linked places provides a wealth of information for the
scholar interested in the intertwined ethnic, racialized, and urban
transformations of the region, but there is very little regarding the
cultural production associated with these transformations.
The second section, Regional
Imaginations, consists of three chapters, authored respectively by
Lawrence A. Herzog, Jo-Anne Berelowitz, and Norma Igle´sias. Herzog
lays out a typology of seven urban ecologies arising in the transfrontier metropolis comprised of Tijuana and its increasingly
sociospatially-stretched-out association with Southern California on
the one hand and the Mexican provincial interior
on the other. Consumption, production, tourism, neighborhoods,
community, and conflict all provide spaces that Herzog views as new or
refashioned in the globalizing context in which Tijuana is immersed.
Berelowitz focuses on so-called border art since 1965. She centralizes
the complex, shifting, and often fraught relationship between localized
border art on and by artists working from the U.S.Mexican border
region, and the mainstream art world of commissions, funding, and
legitimation. Berelowitz chronicles three periods in border art,
beginning with the Chicano movement and its utilization of art from
19681980, the evolution of the Border Arts Workshop/Taller de Arte
Fronterizo from 19841992, and the post-1992 fascination of the
mainstream art community with border art by way of four successive
InSITE events that have highlighted internationally renowned artists
and large installations on both sides of the U.S.Mexico border.
Berelowitz argues that as a result of these evolving relationships and
identities, border art has become globalized and increasingly uncoupled
from the literal border, in ways that are not unproblematic. Igle´sias
shifts the focus to representations of the border on film. She
contrasts the historical development of a stereotypical, shallow genre
of commercial filmmaking marketed to the somewhat captive audience of
Spanish-speaking recent immigrants to the United States and in northern
Mexican cities, with
the much more critical Chicano cinematography concerned with positive
dimensions of interaction and identity on the border, and finally with
the innovative work of independent Mexican filmmakers, videographers,
and musicians in Tijuana. The border has been constructed alternatively
as a space of dollars, violence, vice, and loss of Mexican identity by
commercial films, as a recuperative space of cultural interaction by
Chicano films, and as a space of complex everyday realities for border
dwellers by young independent Tijuanenses.
The third section, Regional Hybridities, includes chapters by
Richard Ca´ndida Smith, David Palumbo-Liu, and Ne´stor Garci´a
Canclini. Ca´ndida Smith uses the work of two artists, U.S.-born Daniel
Joseph Marti´nez and Mexican-born Ramo´n Tamayo, to discuss the
differences in the U.S. and Mexican educational systems and the roles
of the arts and of artists in both countries. He argues that although
both men are usually discussed as Latino artists, Tamayos decision
to stay in Mexicali as a practicing artist and faculty member has
focused his work on the local context, utilization of vernacular
materials, and emphasis on the public service dimension of his artistic
work, whereas Marti´nezs base in the United States has accorded him
greater liberties to work in far-flung sites, producing often
confrontational public art. Both, however, are public intellectuals who
view art as potentially transformative, though of the quite different
contexts in which each works.
In one of the best essays in the collection, Palumbo-Liu discusses the
long association of Alta California with the Pacific Rim and Asia,
extending the volumes focus from the U.S.Mexico connection to
another, equally important regional relationship. He picks up the
mixed feelings theme set up in the introduction to discuss nation,
identity, ethnicity, and artistic production, utilizing several pieces
to focus his questioning of culture and its products in light of all
this mixing. Though Pal-umbo-Liu does not note this in his essay,
Northern Mexico has a long history of Asian labor immigration, thus his
points apply to both Californias. Garci´a Canclinis brief
conclusion queries the specificities of the meaning of hybridity, and
the nature of the openings and closings that are offered at this moment
of mixing. He notes that a truly postborder condition may be more of a
productive metaphor than a lived condition for most who dwell on and
around the U.S.Mexico border, thus bringing a note of caution to
balance the introductory chapters heralding of so many posts.
It was not entirely clear to me why the volume was organized into the
three sections that were utilized, nor why the sections were titled as
they were. I suspect that if the chapters themselves had focused a bit
more systematically on the key questions raised in the introduction,
the volume as a whole would have coalesced more strongly. All the same,
the chapters in this volume raise more questions than they answer, and
in some instances they answer the same questions quite differently,
both of which are the hallmarks of an inherently difficult premise
addressed in thoughtful and complex ways. Perhaps the key question here
is the perennial one concerning the role of the arts in social change.
Do artists and cultural production act as a vanguard, or do they react
to deeper material changes in society? The best answer is provided by
Palumbo-Liu, who suggests that the conditions of immense social,
economic, and political flux within which contemporary border artists
work put the artist in an anticipatory role, attempting to make sense
of that which has not yet solidified: Art is thus itself placed at a
sort of borderFand mixed feelings thus dwell in that liminal,
unsettled, anticipatory state (p. 274).
Another key question involves site
specificity. For the contributors to
this volume, the focus is on the U.S Mexico border in particular. Does
the border, and art produced and exhibited on and about this border by
artists from this border, matter? Is site specificity integral to the
public function of art, or does it limit its potential? These are
difficult questions, answered differently by the contributors. Ca´ndida
Smith states, for example, that the designation border art is the
most trivializing of all labels (p. 218), and Igle´sias argues that
it is the very site specificity of Tijuanas young filmmakers,
videographers, and musicians that has allowed these artists to recover
their city from stereotyping, urban decay, and loss of identity.
Berelowitz takes a more situational approach in her chronicle of the
shift from a localized border art and border artists to a more
portable, internationalized context, arguing that site specificity was
politically vital to border art and artists at a certain period in its
development. To be fair, these are inherently vexing questions,
questions that our tradition of cultural critique at least in the
social sciences, which tends to view cultural production as
derivativeFgives us precious little to work with. Therefore, addressing
the role of arts in social change from the perspective of artists is
particularly useful for
social scientists. In addition, given the inherent spatiality of the
focus of so much academic work on the U.S.Mexico border, as well as
other borders, this volume should be particularly well received by
geographers. In sum, Postborder City provides a timely, provocative,
rich collection that underscores the value of interdisciplinary
perspectives.
Key Words: art, hybridity, transnationalism, U.S.Mexico border. |


