Content area
Full Text
Down These Mean Streets opens with an act of self-expulsion. In the initial passages of this popular autobiography, we find the twelve-year-old protagonist, Piri Thomas, running away from home after his father has punished him unfairly. His flight is a premature descent into the streets, the night, and the underworld of Spanish Harlem, where uncanny scenes seem to foretell his fate. After roaming the streets for hours, young Piri decides to return home that night but only to delay the moment of a decisive self-expulsion.1 That moment would take place when the simmering racial conflict within his nuclear family violently boils over. From the first scenes, Down presents itself as a text marked by signs of the "plague."2 The opening section in the first chapter forms a dramatic prelude to the themes of crime and punishment that prevail in Thomas's narrative of existential crisis. As the story unfolds, signs of this plague are most visible in the racial hostility that beleaguers Piri, his family, and society at large, and in the endemic abuse of drugs and rampant crime: all of these are forms of mimetic violence that will eventually lead the protagonist to serve a six-year prison sentence.
Indeed, the plague represented in Thomas's autobiography encompasses the violation of many laws and social codes. In this article, the focus will be on one that may appear a lesser transgression: Piri's act of speaking about racism at the core of his Puerto Rican family and of promoting a black identity among its members.3 For most critics, this racial drama has not passed unnoticed. After all, since the publication of the book in 1967, sociological approaches to the text have viewed family conflict as the origin of the existential trauma that drives Piri to delinquency (Maddock 62; Lane 815; Luis, Dancing 129-30). However, Piri Thomas's transgression-subversive by itself-conveys a more radical meaning when examined in a wider context, that is, the historical development of racial relations and literary traditions in Puerto Rico and Latin America.
In general, critical studies of the racial themes in the autobiography have placed the text in the context of racial ideologies as constructed in the United States, leaving unstudied and therefore unresolved how the text also constructs itself against a Hispanic historical...