@article{Arbino_2021, title={“The Gifts of the Hurricane:” Reimagining Post-María Puerto Rico through Comics }, volume={20}, url={https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3815}, DOI={10.25120/etropic.20.2.2021.3815}, abstractNote={<p>Although the media framed Hurricanes Irma and María and their aftermath as a tragedy, and indeed it was, a small literary canon has emerged that explores the storms as an opportunity to rethink Puerto Rico’s future. The aftermath of the hurricanes impacted cultural production two-fold; by forcing writers to engage with climate change, while also rethinking the colonial relationship that Puerto Rico has with the United States. Looking specifically at selections from English- and Spanish-language comic anthologies <em>Ricanstruction </em>(2018), <em>Puerto Rico Strong </em>(2018) and <em>Nublado: Escombros de María </em>(2018) as well as single-author graphic novels like <em>María </em>and <em>Temporada </em>(2019), I explore how authors used Hurricane María as a catalyst to reimagine and recreate a more autonomous future for the island through decolonial imaginaries, a notion laid out by Emma Pérez. Despite their different approaches to Puerto Rico’s future, the comics’ commonality lies in counter-narratives that espouse community values, indigeneity, innovation, and reclamation of nature as a means to confront hardship. Together they produce alternative modalities for transcending the vulnerabilities of debilitating disasters brought on by climate change. They offer a return to pre-colonial values combined with new technologies to empower the island to break from the United States and withstand future storms.</p>}, number={2}, journal={eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the Tropics}, author={Arbino, Daniel}, year={2021}, month={Sep.}, pages={156–179} }