Franco Laguna Correa


Franco Laguna Correa is an ethnographer and writer, also known for his heteronyms "Francisco Laguna-Correa," "Dr. Crank," "Crank," "Sardine," "f.l Crank," "Gaetano Fonseca" and "Mehmet Amazigh." He has been included by literary critics in the so-called "New Latino Boom," a literary movement that features 21st-century Latin American fiction authors writing in Spanish in the United States. He has contributed to the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature with the essay "Brown/Brownness/Mestizaje".
He was awarded in 2012 the National Literary Prize of the North American Academy of the Spanish Language, an institution based in New York City. In 2013, he received the International Poetry Prize of the Autonomous University of Aguascalientes. In 2016, Laguna Correa was one of the recipients of The Fuerza Award, a social recognition for his intellectual activism in the Pittsburgh area granted by The City of Pittsburgh, the collective Café con Leche, and The Latin American Cultural Union. The Chicago Review of Books recommended his book Crush Me for the 2017 National Poetry Month.
His novel Wild North was included in the list of best Mexican fiction of 2017 and published in the daily newspaper El Informador.
He has been invited to deliver talks about his research at various institutions, including Emory University, the University of California, The University of Leeds, Texas State University, and Duke University.
Besides contributing on a regular basis to the online publications E-International Relations and Forum Nepantla, he is the creator of the online project Cyber~Texts.

Education and teaching

Laguna Correa graduated from the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria in 2001 after being forced to interrupt his studies due to the 1999 UNAM strike. He began his university studies at The School of Philosophy and Letters and The School of Political and Social Sciences of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, which is often cited as the most prestigious university of the Spanish-speaking world.
He completed his undergraduate education at Portland State University, where he received a double BA in Liberal Studies and Literature. In addition, he completed a Master of Fine Arts at the University of Pittsburgh and two M.A. degrees, one in Social Anthropology and another in Philosophy, both at the Autonomous University of Madrid.
He was the recipient in 2014 of the K. Leroy Irvis Fellowship at the University of Pittsburgh, and in 2016 he received a doctoral degree in Cultural and Literary Studies from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has held researching and teaching appointments at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, University of Pittsburgh, High Point University, the University of Denver, and Universidad del Valle de México.

Theoretical work

He has published scholarly works on various subjects, including exile, cognitive approaches to cultural modernity, the implications of neoliberalism in the production of literary texts, postmodernity, subalternity, the intersection of culture and sound, among others. The Routledge Handbook of Latin American Literary Translation and the A Companion to Multiethnic Literature of the United States credit Laguna Correa for coining the term "New Latino American", which puts forward the notion that in the United States new Latin American cultural agents are entangled within the framework of global capitalism as producers of cultural artifacts distinct to those produced by traditional Latino communities. He contributed to the re-discovery of the 19-century novella Perico by Arcadio Zentella with his academic article, "Recuperando a "Perico" de Arcadio Zentella como un proyecto subalterno de liberación," published in 2013 by the journal A Contracorriente of North Carolina State University.

Selected criticism

Encyclopedia entry "Brown/Brownness/Mestizaje".
"Portraying Gender and Ethnicity in Black and White in Roma by Alfonso Cuarón".
"Ray Bradbury on War, Recycling, and Artificial Intelligence".
"Ferdydurke, Les Enfants Terribles, and the Future of Childhood".
In Contemporary U.S. Latinx Literature in Spanish: Straddling Identities, essay "The Rise of Latino Americanism: Deterritorialization and Postnational Imagination in New Latino American Writers".
In Volver a México : espacios, medios y poéticas del regreso, essay "Narrando el exilio y la experiencia de retorno de Francisco Zarco: personalidad, encuentros y enfermedad de un liberal mexicano".
"Recuperando a Perico de Arcadio Zentella como un proyecto subalterno de liberación: limitaciones historiográficas en el siglo XIX mexicano,".

Selected bibliography

TitlePublisherYear of Publication
Acedia under the heteronym of "f.l. Crank"Rayo Press2020
OrtodoxaSuburbano Ediciones2018
Wild NorthRayo Press2016

TitlePublisherYear of PublicationNotes
Requiem for The Unhappy under the heteronym "f.l. Crank"Radical Narratives2020-
Poesía Temprana under the heteronym "Gaetano Fonseca"Miglior Fabbro Eds.2020-
Crush Me: Ría Brava under the heteronym "f.l. Crank"Radical Narratives2017National Poetry Prize of the University of Aguascalientes

TitlePublisherYear of Publication
Historia de un hombre devastado por el siglo XX under the heteronym "F. Laguna Correa"Rayo Press2020
Sentencia definitiva under the heteronym "F. Laguna Correa"Rayo Press2020
Crítica literaria y otros cuentosEditorial Paroxismo2011

TitlePublisherYear of Publication
Pedagogy for : Reading Lessons under the heteronym "Dr. Crank"Thinking Books2020
The Book Where You Surrender under the heteronym "Dr. Crank"Radical Narratives2020
Aphorism under the heteronym "Dr. Crank"Radical Narratives2020
Resquebrajadura: deforme y mutilado, este relatoEditorial Paroxismo2014

Personal life

Franco currently lives in Mexico City, where he works as a legal analyst besides holding a remote interdisciplinary research position at the University of Pittsburgh.