(Dis)constituting Literary Narratives.
Constitutionalism found on the street/ law in literature; Latin American literary narratives; constituent narratives; literary narratives
Latin American constitutionalism followed discontinuous paths and colonial traces, which oscillated between the institution of the language of power and silence. Due to the consolidation of democracies, between the end of the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st century, a certain tension has begun to put pressure on its founding logic, limits to the discretion of power and the legitimacy of constituent power. Minorities and vulnerable groups , expropriated from power and from the dominant legal, social and political discourse, become interlocutors of the hegemonic will which, under the auspices of legitimacy, should not compromise the radical differences and pluralism typical of democracies. Assuming these assumptions and on the basis of the contributions of the Narrativist Theory of Law, the Philosophy of Language and Constitutionalism Found on the Street, I investigate whether the literary narratives dormant at the end of the last century, in Latin America, have the ability to provide elements of denunciation, critical and revealing ways of existing and resisting that matter to Constitutionalism, a phenomenon that goes beyond the constitutional normative texts and is strengthened in the Path. To do this, articulate literary works and writings by Daniel Mundukuru, Julie Dorrico and Férrez, understood, in this research, as reflective and privileged hypotheses of investigation