Advanced Search

Procure por Celebridades
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

Revista Paradero 69 May 2026

Revista Paradero 69: The Cartography of a Liminal Archive

In 2019, the magazine launched its most famous intervention: a “ghost edition” distributed only by leaving copies on bus seats across the Mexico City metropolitan area. Titled Ruta Fantasma (Ghost Route), the issue contained no text—only a map of bus routes that had been eliminated due to privatization, with stops marked where protesters had been disappeared. This silent cartography became evidence in a human rights case, though the editorial collective remains anonymous to this day. Revista Paradero 69

In the fragmented landscape of Latin American underground publishing, few projects have managed to embody the tension between ephemeral artistic expression and enduring cultural documentation as effectively as Revista Paradero 69 . Emerging from the specific sociopolitical context of early 21st-century Mexico—though its exact founding year and location remain deliberately ambiguous—this publication occupies a unique niche: it is neither a traditional literary journal, nor a political fanzine, nor a commercial art magazine, but rather a hybrid artifact that resists easy categorization. Paradero 69 (literally “Stop 69” or “Terminal 69”) takes its name from a suggestive intersection: “paradero” denotes a bus stop or terminal, while “69” evokes both a playful sexuality and an unresolved, infinite loop. This essay argues that the journal functions as a cartographic project—mapping the liminal spaces between genres, generations, genders, and geographies—and in doing so, offers a critical model for independent publishing as a form of resistance against cultural homogenization. Revista Paradero 69: The Cartography of a Liminal

University libraries that collect the magazine face a paradox: by preserving it, they violate its spirit. The magazine’s response has been to include, in issue 19 (or 22), a removable page printed on biodegradable paper with instructions to “plant this page in a public garden. It contains seeds of a lost issue.” In the fragmented landscape of Latin American underground