The Ballad of Narcomexico
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Date
2013-08-10
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Journal of Folklore Research
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Abstract
In the first years of the new millennium, Mexico experienced
a wave of violence associated with the trafficking of illegal substances,
and the deep-seated Mexican ballad tradition called the corrido has
served as a chronicle of these events, facilitating a popular discourse
couched in the sweet sonorities of Mexican song and bespeaking a heroic
vision of history as witnessed at the grass-roots level. Here, in what was
first delivered as an address to the American Folklore Society, I seek to
get beyond the slick veneer of the narcocorridos, ballads that celebrate
and glamorize the trade, to sample a zone of commemorative practice
where narcocorridos share a space in the national consciousness with
two additional manifestations of the contemporary genre: corridos of
trafficking, which tell drug-world stories in a level-headed manner, and
corridos of remediation, which seek to ameliorate the devastation
wrought upon the Mexican people by the drug wars of the early twentyfirst
century.
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McDowell, John H. "The Ballad of Narcomexico." Journal of Folklore Research, vol. 49 no. 3, 2012, p. 249-274.
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