Question

A visual poem from this movement depicts a straight line and a curvy line, to which adding a doodled boat reveals the word “Navigation” hidden in its title, “Zion.” A poet from this movement claimed that Borges (“BOR-hess”) was a “philene” (“FILL-een”), but sorted most other poets into “currents” named for anti-gay slurs. Quím (10[1])Font designed an (10[1])ouroboros (“oo-ruh-BOH-russ”) logo for this movement’s magazine Lee Harvey Oswald, (10[1])which published poems (-5[1])by Ernesto San Epifanio. In a novel based on the author’s earlier The Spirit of Science Fiction, members of this movement hate the (10[1])“great enemy,” Octavio Paz. Poets from this movement named (-5[1])Juan García Madero, Ulises (10[1])Lima, and Arturo Belano (-5[1])take a white Chevy Impala into the Sonoran Desert to look (10[1])for Cesárea Tinajero (10[1])(“say-SAH-ray-uh tee-nuh-HAY-ro”). For 10 points, name this fictional version of (10[1])Mexican infrarealism from (-5[1])Roberto (10[1])Bolaño’s (10[2])The Savage (-5[1])Detectives. ■END■ (10[2]0[7])

ANSWER: visceral realism [or realismo visceral; accept infrarealism, infrarrealismo, infrarrealistas, or infras until “infrarealism” is read; reject “realism” or “realismo”]
<World Literature>
= Average correct buzz position