"The border is a policed realm, neoliberal market, an affective landscape of spectral echoes, a geography of traces. These are the principles that assemble precis around certain coordinates. The death of a girl, a crossing narrative, media static of late-century rhetoric on border bodies, precis involves poetry in mapping the Mexico/US border and its relationship to America, while resisting the urge to impose a definitiveness. precis, in its sustained breath, simply asks: What about the body? What about the personal and the communal? In precis the reader is asked to follow along without forgetting that overshadowed in every moment of the known, every authorization of what is, there is a print or silence asking what should there also be.
precis, with its stutters and silences and its 'broken strain of memory,' rises as a prayer against election year stump speeches that impose 'on bodies the politics of narrative purpose.' Even in its precarity, no wall can be built to keep this precis, this prayer, from making its way inland or on shore, from disturbing those narratives that criminalize a people, leave them for dead, and re-criminalize them in their death. 'From silence,' Alvergue writes, 'the crossing begins,' 'to give form to what [has] been lost,' to map the porous borders of 'Amnesia y Ame?rica.'”