The Life, Literature and Legacy of Luis J. Rodrguez: In the Long Run
By (Author) Josephine Metcalf
Edited by Ben Olgun
Edinburgh University Press
Edinburgh University Press
7th November 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Literary studies: from c 2000
Literary studies: poetry and poets
Hardback
592
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Luis Rodrguez is a prominent Latinx poet, memoirist and activist renowned for his candid visceral accounts of urban working-class life that includes youth gang violence, incarceration and drug abuse, gruelling factory work and union organising activities and collective approaches to redemption and political empowerment, which have resonated across multiple communities in the United States and abroad. Accordingly, whilst Rodrguez has been the focus of some critical scholarship, huge segments of his life, work and legacy remain unexamined. This anthology has commissioned new and unique critical essays and reflections on Rodrguez's life and works, putting forward new ideas about bringing the voices of 'barrio organic intellectuals' to the fore. The anthology deliberately includes traditional academics as well as more public intellectuals and creative writers from across Europe and the Americas to reflect Rodriguez's own diverse outputs as a prisoner author and activist.
Josephine Metcalf is a Senior Lecturer in American Studies and Criminology at the University of Hull, UK where she is the co-founder and co-director of the Cultures of Incarceration Centre. Her research focuses on the representation of prisons and street gangs in literature and other pop-culture forms and the ways these have been received by audiences. She has published on prison memoirs by authors such as Stanley Tookie Williams and Shaun Attwood and wrote a foreword for an anniversary edition of Joseph Bathanti's award-winning prison novel, Coventry. Ben V. Olgun is the Robert and Liisa Erickson Presidential Chair in English in the Department of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and Founding Director of the UCSB Global Latinidades Centre. In addition to articles published in Cultural Critique, American Literary History, Aztln, Frontiers, Biography, MELUS, and Nepantla, Olgun is the author of La Pinta: Chicana/o History, Culture, and Politics (2010) and Violentologies: Violence, Identity, and Ideology in Latina/o Literature (2021). He also is a published poet, and author of Red Leather Gloves (2014) and At the Risk of Seeming Ridiculous: Poems from Cuba Libre (2014).