Iberoromania, no. 102, 2025.
“Una alegría vinculante: afectos inesperados en "El sueño de toda célula””.
[sic] Revista de literatura y arte de la Asociación de Profesores de Literatura del Uruguay
Núm. 32 (2022): Literatura y ciencias desde la teoría del Antropoceno.
[sic] Revista de literatura y arte de la Asociación de Profesores de Literatura del Uruguay
Núm. 32 (2022): Literatura y ciencias desde la teoría del Antropoceno.
In "The Dream of Every Cell," Mexican poet Maricela Guerrero (2018) proposes the search for a poetic language that, without ceasing to recognize the extractivist model that has caused the environmental crisis, also functions as a form of care:«¿Imaginamos un río de lobos en las mesetas que cobija riachuelos, arroyos y comunidades de vida comunicándose en una lengua que no sea la lengua del imperio?». In this article, I argue that in the current context of an environmental crisis whose temporal and spatial scale challenges human comprehension, as Timothy Morton (2013) notes, Guerrero's text offers, through poetry, an environmental imagination that emphasizes the importance of bonds and the biological kinship we share with other beings. Thus, facing global territorial devastation and the sometimes paralyzing consciousness of climate change, the text moves away from dystopian literature to propose joy and tenderness as affective motors for political resistance.
Cuadernos de Literatura, Revista de la Universidad Javeriana Vol. 29 (2025).
Co-edited with Carolina Sánchez and Sofía Rosa Rivero.