A cultural history of a departure from conventional political and national forms
Ramon E. Soto-Crespo on his book Mainland Passage: The Cultural Anomaly of Puerto Rico
In a nutshell
Mainland Passage is a historical and cultural study of the Puerto Rican mass migration to New York City in the 1940s and how this migration ultimately created a Puerto Rican cultural borderland. I call this crucial migration the mainland passage because it served to strengthen Puerto Rico’s political relationship with the United States.
The book describes how this passage to the mainland was coordinated with the creation of a new state apparatus in Puerto Rico—the borderland state. As a new form of political belonging, the borderland state combines attributes from conventional political forms (such as the sovereign nation-state and the federated state), but refuses to be either.
Mainland Passage elucidates how these two historical events, the mainland passage and the creation of the borderland state, mark a departure from conventional political and national forms. The Puerto Rico status debate has managed to devalue these historical events and as a result the most discussed options, of statehood or independence, represent false political alternatives.
The wide angle
Mainland Passage identifies a neglected historical tradition of Puerto Rican writing, exemplified by Antonio Fernós Isern, Luis Muñoz Marín, Luis Muñoz Rivera, and Antonio S. Pedreira, that theorizes political belonging outside the dominant nation-state ideology.
For decades their thinking was regarded as incomprehensible. After the rise of Third World decolonization movements, it was relegated to the archives of politically abstract discourses understood as complicit of colonialism. This perception started to change in the late 1990s, when Puerto Rican scholars began questioning conventional theories of nationalism.
A groundbreaking moment came with the publication of Chicana writer Gloria Anzaldúa’s Borderlands/La Frontera (1987), which legitimized the study of those spaces created in between conventional forms, that is, borderlands. Anzaldúa’s manifesto argued that anomalous political and cultural constructs should be understood in their own terms.
By adopting Anzaldúa’s theory as a lens to look at Puerto Rican writing, I was able to detect particularities of the Puerto Rican condition that have remained obscure when viewed through the national lens. Not only did previously rejected writings become more legible, but also a decades-old pattern of thinking started to emerge. There was a specific borderland style of thought particular to the Caribbean region, which found expression in Puerto Rican writing.
I discovered that this specific borderland thinking became institutionalized as the political philosophy behind the 1951 Puerto Rican Constitution, decades before Anzaldúa’s writing. At the same time, it became clear that affirming a political anomaly would be exceptionally difficult in the heyday of worldwide nation-state dominance.
Ever since the 1950s, the Puerto Rican borderland state has struggled to be understood in its own terms and has struggled against international and domestic forces that want it to be “normal” (i.e., a sovereign nation-state). Most of the scholarship on Puerto Rico and on the Puerto Rican diaspora in the U.S. shares this normalizing perspective.
In this context, Mainland Passage articulates a contrarian perspective. The book affirms Puerto Rico’s cultural and political anomaly as its most significant contribution to global diversity. I argue that this particular political anomaly has defied the regimes that have attempted to normalize it needs to be understood in its own right.
As a new form of political belonging, the borderland state combines attributes from conventional political forms (such as the sovereign nation-state and the federated state), but refuses to be either.