Skip to main navigation Skip to main content

 

You’re invited! Graywolf Literary Salon in Minneapolis (9/25). Click here for more details.

 

Book Title

Autobiography of Cotton

Subtitle
A Novel
Author 1
Cristina Rivera Garza; Translated from the Spanish by Christina MacSweeney
Body
In 1934, a young José Revueltas traveled to Tamaulipas to support the cotton workers’ strike in Estación Camarón, which became the basis of his landmark novel Human Mourning. In her own groundbreaking novel, Autobiography of Cotton, Cristina Rivera Garza recounts her grandparents’ journey from mining towns to those same cotton fields as it intersects with Revueltas’s life in a vivid and evocative history of cotton cultivation along the Mexico-US border.
 
Through archival research and personal narrative, Rivera Garza chronicles the way cotton transformed the borderlands by reconstructing the cotton workers’ strike and reveals how cycles of deprivation and ecocide persist across generations. Deeply personal and politically acute, Rivera Garza crafts a new kind of border novel that tells how a brittle land radically altered her grandparents’ lives and the territories they helped develop. An intimate fictionalization, Autobiography of Cotton reveals a rich social history of agricultural colonization, labor activism, environmental degradation, and cross-border migration.

Share Title

List Price
$9.99
ISBN
ISBN
978-1-64445-370-4
Format
Format
Ebook
Publication Date
Publication Date
Subject
Subject
Pages
Pages
264
Keynote
A novel about how cotton workers transformed the Mexico-US borderlands, by a Pulitzer Prize–winning author

About the Author

Cristina  Rivera Garza
Credit: Annette Hornischer
Cristina Rivera Garza is the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Liliana’s Invincible Summer. A MacArthur Fellow, she is the Hugh Roy and Lillie Cranz Cullen Distinguished Chair and founder of the University of Houston’s PhD in Creative Writing in Spanish.
More by author
Christina MacSweeney is the award-winning literary translator of works by Julián Herbert, Valeria Luiselli, and Elvira Navarro. She received the 2024 Sundial Literary Translation Award for her translation of Verónica Gerber Bicecci’s The Company.
More by author

Praise

Back to Table of Contents