To see the other types of publications on this topic, follow the link: Latin American literature|Literature.

Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Latin American literature|Literature'

Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles

Select a source type:

Consult the top 50 dissertations / theses for your research on the topic 'Latin American literature|Literature.'

Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.

You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.

Browse dissertations / theses on a wide variety of disciplines and organise your bibliography correctly.

1

Montt, Strabucchi Maria. "Imagining China in contemporary Latin American literature." Thesis, University of Manchester, 2017. https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/imagining-china-in-contemporary-latin-american-literature(39f1026f-5a85-4bd5-b9ac-db55a80d2e14).html.

Full text
Abstract:
Since the late 1980s, there has been a steady production of Latin American narrative fiction in Spanish concerning China and the Chinese. Despite the work written about China and its relation to Latin America, no comprehensive examination of the representation of China in literature has been produced thus far. This thesis analyses nine novels in which China is the main theme, exploring how China has been represented in Latin American narrative fiction in recent decades. Using 'China' as a multidimensional term informed by Sara Ahmed's understanding of 'strangerness' (2000), this thesis first explores how the novels studied here both highlight and undermine assumptions about China that have long shaped Latin America's understanding of 'China'. Secondly, using theories of the fetish, it shows 'China' to be a kind of literary/imaginary 'third' term which reframes Latin American discourses of alterity. On one level, it is argued that these texts play with the way that 'China' stands in as a wandering signifier and as a metonym for Asia, a gesture that essentialises it as an unchanging other. On another level, it argues that the novels' employment of 'China' resists essentialist constructions of Latin American identity. 'China' is thus shown here to be a symbolic figure in Latin America, serving as a concept through which criticism of the construction of fetishised otherness becomes possible, as well as criticism of the exclusion inherent in essentialist discourses of identity, such as those contained in mestizaje. These discourses of mestizaje have traditionally emphasised racial and cultural mixture, and have excluded the Chinese from discourses of Latin American identity. As a result, 'China' is used here to deconstruct bound identities, interrupting discourses of otherness within Latin America. From this perspective, it is argued that these novels tend to gesture towards an understanding of identity as 'being-with', and community as inoperative, as developed by Jean-Luc Nancy (1991, 2000), whilst taking a cosmopolitan stance, as developed by Berthold Schoene (2011). The novels have been divided between those that set their stories in China, such as Cesar Aira's 'Una novela china' (1987); those that explore Chinese communities in Latin America, such as Ariel Magnus' 'Un chino en bicicleta' (2007); and those that focus on Latin American travel to China, such as Ximena Sanchez Echenique's 'El ombligo del dragon' (2007). Indebted to Ahmed's, Nancy's and Schoene's theoretical perspectives, Chapter 1 explores how 'China', as both a physical space and a discursive context, foregrounds negotiations of power in the histories of both China and Latin America. Chapter 2 studies how 'China' is used to recall and interrogate the notion of an indistinct 'oriental'. The final chapter seeks to understand the ways in which the novels articulate travel to China as a means of challenging Eurocentric structures and 'national' epistemologies. Ultimately, by disclosing the complex operations through which 'China' is represented in Latin American literary discourses, this study explores possible further reconfigurations of Latin American notions of identity and community as non-essentialist and in constant development.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
2

VIDAL, PALOMA. "AFTER ALL: PATHS IN LATIN AMERICAN CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE." PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO, 2006. http://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/Busca_etds.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=9407@1.

Full text
Abstract:
COORDENAÇÃO DE APERFEIÇOAMENTO DO PESSOAL DE ENSINO SUPERIOR
A tese acompanha as trajetórias de Diamela Eltit, João Gilberto Noll e Rodolfo Enrique Fogwill, realizando através do trabalho desses três escritores uma cartografia das questões estéticas e políticas que atravessam as últimas décadas. Seus projetos narrativos, tão diferentes entre si quanto pertinentes para nosso tempo, foram marcados por uma perda de sentido referente às crises da utopia revolucionária e vanguardista, que se torna visível na transição da ditadura à pós-ditadura. A partir dessa perda, surgirão algumas alternativas para uma literatura por vir: uma escrita performática, que coloca em jogo o corpo do próprio escritor para dar sentido aos trânsitos contemporâneos, no caso de Noll; uma escrita agonística, que faz da provocação cínica uma arma contra a apatia contemporânea, no de Fogwill; uma escrita resistente, que deixa ver os efeitos perversos do consenso neoliberal, no de Eltit.
This thesis follows the paths of Diamela Eltit, João Gilberto Noll and Rodolfo Enrique Fogwill, charting, through their works, the territory of aesthetical and political questions of the last decades. The narrative projects of these writers, as distinct from each other as they are pertinent to our time, were marked by a loss of meaning that relates to the crisis of revolutionary and avant-garde utopias, which becomes visible in the transition from dictatorship to post- dictatorship. Taking this loss as a starting point, some alternatives for a literature to come will appear: a performatic writing, that puts in place the body of the writer himself to give sense to contemporary transits, in Noll´s case; an agonistic writing, that uses cynical provocation as a weapon against contemporary apathy, in Fogwill´s; a resistant writing, that allows us to see the perverse effects of the neoliberal consensus, in Eltit´s.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
3

Metherd, Mary Swift. "Within two worlds : a case for intra-American literature /." Digital version accessible at:, 2000. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/main.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
4

Guzmán, María Constanza. "Gregory Rabassa's Latin American literature a translator's visible legacy /." Diss., Online access via UMI:, 2006.

Find full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
5

Wirshing, Irene. "National trauma in postdictatorship Latin American literature Chile and Argentina /." Diss., Online access via UMI:, 2006.

Find full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
6

Lutes, Todd Oakley. "Shipwreck and deliverance: Modernity and political culture in Latin American literature." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/187249.

Full text
Abstract:
This study examines the political theory of modernity as it appears in the work of contemporary Latin American writers and thinkers (pensadores). It is designed to help bridge the gap that separates the North American and European dialogue on modernity from the parallel dialogue on modernity currently flourishing in Latin America. The dialogues are brought together in two ways. First, the theory of modernity, which is still often thought to apply only or primarily to the developed world, is subjected to the challenge of the Latin American political and cultural context. Many features of the theory are found to apply equally well to both cultures, and these features provide the basis for the second "bridging" of the two dialogues, in which some of the most interesting Latin American responses to the problems of modernity are brought to the attention of North American and European political scholars. After reviewing the problem of modernity in some depth, the work of Jose Ortega y Gasset is presented both as a link to German philosophical thought and as a pattern for subsequent discussion of modernity in the Spanish-speaking world. Ortega's uniquely Latin way of understanding modernity is then compared to other philosophical approaches, and placed within the context of political literature in Latin America. Literature is shown to be a uniquely suitable forum for conveying Ortega's approach to modernity because it expresses in itself the central role of arts and culture in his political thought. The balance of the study focuses on the works of three contemporary Latin American authors: Octavio Paz of Mexico, Gabriel Garcia Marquez of Colombia, and Mario Vargas Llosa of Peru. Each author's major works are placed within the context of the model Latin American response to modernity inspired by Ortega and analyzed for significant contributions to the discussion of modernity. Their most important insights center around the need to assimilate the value of tradition in a new approach to modernity by means of some form of democratic dialogue combined with critical appreciation for the cultural uniqueness of nations.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
7

Frenk, Susan F. "Carlos Fuentes and the Latin American 'Boom'." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1988. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.306404.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
8

Garcia, Alesia 1962. "Aztec Nation: History, inscription, and indigenista feminism in Chicana literature and political discourse." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/282854.

Full text
Abstract:
In the United States in the mid-1960's, Chicano cultural nationalists mobilized a generation by recuperating the history and mythology of the pre-conquest Aztecs as strategies of political resistance. Claiming themselves la Raza de Bronce the Bronze race) in their art, literature, and political discourse, Chicano activists and intellectuals distinguished themselves racially from white America and worked toward reunifying an indigenous culture that had been fragmented by colonization and diaspora. This discursive practice of reinscribing Mexican Indian ancestry is a political act that I refer to as narrating the Aztec Nation. Indigenous movement activists across the Americas have often reclaimed their pre-colonial histories. "Aztec Nation" examines the impact of Chicano cultural nationalist revisions of Mexican indigenismo (politics and aesthetics of the post-1910 indigenous movement) upon race, class, gender, and sexuality in contemporary Chicano and Chicana literature and political discourse. In my analysis of Chicano and Chicana political manifestos, graphic art, poetry, essays, and novels, I trace various Chicano cultural nationalist expressions of indigenista ideology throughout el movimiento (the Chicano movement). In particular, I develop critical approaches for rereading Chicana literature and activist journalism published in Chicano/a movement newspapers and journals between 1969 and 1979 that emphasize Chicana faminist reinventions of indigenismo as a transnational alternative to ideological limitations within the Chicano cultural nationalist and second wave white American feminist movements. I offer a new critical term: "Chicana indigenista feminism," which recognizes a distinct Chicana feminist discourse that is characterized by an ongoing negotiation of mestiza (mixed blood) identity. My investigation begins with analyses of Chicano cultural nationalist literature and political documents from 1964 and ends with a reevaluation of chicana indigenista feminist theories posited as recently as 1994.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
9

Buiting, Lotte Bernarda. "Echoes of the Child in Latin American Literature and Film." Thesis, Harvard University, 2015. http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:17467313.

Full text
Abstract:
This dissertation explores the rhetoric of childhood to comprehend how Latin American literature and film signify childhood. It furthermore analyzes the figure of the child as a rhetorical device in the construction of literary and cinematographic meaning in twentieth and twenty-first century poetry, narrative prose and film. I claim that, contrary to prevailing cultural notions of childhood innocence, the child often constitutes an unsettling presence, signaling textual as well as extradiegetic opacities and tensions. Echoes of the Child is divided into three chapters that each present a different approach to childhood. Chapter 1 posits the politicization of the child narrator’s voice as both enabling and restricting the articulation of socio-political trauma. Analyzing texts by Nellie Campobello, Rosario Castellanos, Juan Pablo Villalobos and Juan Rulfo, I contend that child narrators create and subvert meaning depending on the position they occupy vis-à-vis the socio-political turmoil they witness. The second chapter postulates an uneasy alliance between what I call the ‘visual pull’ of the child on screen, and the erotic charge of the image in three Argentine films by Lucrecia Martel, Julia Solomonoff and Federico León / Martín Rejtman. I probe the relationship between the child’s strong screen presence and the forms in which the cinematographic image offers the child ways of transforming sexuality into sensuality; resisting heteronormative sexuality; and of eluding the spell of the adult’s libidinal gaze. Performing when she is merely present, I argue that the child bestows a performative dimension on her acting and her very presence. The third and final chapter posits infancy as an impossible experience in poetry from the historical avant-garde by Oliverio Girondo, César Vallejo and Vicente Huidobro. I contend that reading the poetry guided by the infant reveals two sides of ‘experience;’ the poetic expression of the infant’s experience of the world, a question I broach through psychoanalysis, and the poet’s attempts at articulating transcendental experience in language. My analyses reveal how the rhetoric of childhood bears on issues and dynamics in the socio-political realm; it thus contributes to our understanding of processes of signification within Latin American culture.
Romance Languages and Literatures
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
10

Kendrick-Alcántara, Carolyn. "Life among the living dead the Gothic horrors of Latin American literature /." Diss., Restricted to subscribing institutions, 2007. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1383468231&sid=1&Fmt=2&clientId=1564&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
11

Rizo, Antonio. "Expressions narratives du temps dans le conte hispano-américain contemporain Thèse pour obtenir le grade de docteur de l'Université Paris III, UFR des études ibériques et latino-américaines, discipline espagnol /." Villeneuve-d'Ascq : Presses universitaires du Septentrion, 2001. http://books.google.com/books?id=2GJdAAAAMAAJ.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
12

Gil, Lydia Mariana. "From the book to the desert : an examination of twentieth-century Jewish writing in Spanish America /." Digital version accessible at:, 1999. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/main.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
13

Bender, Jacob. "Latin labyrinths, Celtic knots: modernism and the dead in Irish and Latin American literature." Diss., University of Iowa, 2017. https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/5714.

Full text
Abstract:
The Irish throughout their tumultuous history immigrated not only to North America but across Latin America, particularly to Cuba, Puerto Rico, Colombia, Chile, Argentina, and Mexico. Ireland and many of these Latin American countries share a close yet under-examined relationship, inasmuch as they are predominantly Catholic, post-colonial, hybrid populations with fraught immigrant experiences abroad and long histories of resisting Anglo-centric imperialism at home. More particularly, the peoples of these nations engage intimately with the dead (as shown, for example, by the Mexican Day of the Dead and Celtic roots of Halloween), and the dead appear frequently in literature from these countries that takes up issues of colonialism and anti-colonial struggles. The dead can function as repositories for forgotten history and allies in counter-imperial struggle; these roles become particularly important in the 20th century, wherein the forces of economic modernization have rushed to erase the memories of the dead. From the speech of the dead in the prose works of Juan Rulfo, Máirtín Ó Cadhain, Samuel Beckett, and Carlos Fuentes, to the anticolonial poetics of William Butler Yeats and Julia de Burgos, this thesis examines how these two regions have, both in parallel and in concert, utilized the dead to bolster various nationalistic projects. This dissertation also explores patterns of Irish/Latin American literary citation and influence, tracing, for example, how Jorge Luis Borges’s responded to James Joyce, or how a scene from Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels is re-enacted in the novels of Flann O’Brien and Gabriel García Márquez. This project contributes to comparative approaches to Irish literary and modernist studies, improves our nascent understanding of how the Irish and Latin Americans have interacted throughout their overlapping histories, and expands our comprehension of how the dead have been and continue to be utilized across the developing world to resist economic neo-colonialism.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
14

Metz-Cherne, Emily. "Inconceivable Saviors| Indigeneity and Childhood in U.S. and Andean Literature." Thesis, University of Pittsburgh, 2013. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3573262.

Full text
Abstract:

This dissertation explores the question of indigenous development and its literary representation through an investigation of depictions of growth in novels from the United States and Peru where boys mature, perhaps, into men. I find that texts with adolescent characters intimately connected to indigenous communities challenge western concepts of maturity and development as presented in the traditional Bildungsroman. Specifically, I read José María Arguedas’s Los ríos profundo s (1958) and Sherman Alexie’s Flight (2007) as parodies of the genre that call into question the allegory of a western civilizing mission with its lineal trajectory of growth in which the indigenous is relegated to an uncivilized time before modernity. I describe the protagonists of these novels as inconceivable saviors; inconceivable in that the West cannot imagine them, as indigenous, to be the saviors of the nation (i.e., its protectors and reproducers). They are border-thinkers who live in-between epistemological spaces and the stories of their lives serve as kinds of border- Bildungsromane, narratives of growth that arise in the blurred time/space of a border culture, or Bil(dung)sroman, stories of the abject or expelled. Arguedas’s and Alexie’s narratives confront the issue of race, a problem that allegories of the consolidation and development of the nation (e.g., Bildungsroman and foundational fictions) evade through magical means by turning the form into a fetish and presenting fetishized fetal origins that offer reassurances of legitimacy for the western narrative of modernity and the nation-state. That is, the traditional form acts like a talisman that magically disappears the fragmentation of coloniality by providing a history to hold on to, creating an origin that does not really exist. Instead of conforming to the model of the genre or rejecting it, Arguedas’s and Alexie’s texts yield to the power of the original form, appearing to tell the familiar story while carrying a subversive message. Their power derives from the uncertainty inherent in this mimesis. In this way, these novels encourage readers to question the maturation process as conceived and represented in the west and in western literature and to consider alternative paths and formations of self.

APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
15

Rodriguez, Cristina. "Find Yourself Here| Neighborhood Logics in Twenty-First Century Chicano and Latino Literature." Thesis, University of California, Irvine, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3717110.

Full text
Abstract:

"Find Yourself Here" argues that since transmigrants often form profound connections to place, we can develop a nuanced account of transmigrant subjectivity through innovative fiction by migrants who describe their own neighborhoods. The authors studied use their own hometowns as both setting and stylistic inspiration, deploying various formal techniques to mirror the fictional location to the real one, thus literarily enacting the neighborhood. I construct a neighborhood geography from each work, by traveling on foot, interviewing the neighbors and local historians, mapping the text’s fictional setting upon the actual spaces it references, and teasing out connections between place, narrative form, and migrancy, to demonstrate how excavating the locale illuminates the text. My methodology is interdisciplinary: it incorporates recent sociological studies of transnationalism by Linda Basch, Patricia Pessar, and Jorge Duany, tenets of Human Geography, and the work of Latino literary theorists including Raúl Homero Villa and Mary Pat Bray on space in narrative. My literary neighborhood geographies—of Salvador Plascencia’s El Monte barrio, Junot Díaz’s New Jersey housing development, Sandra Cisneros’ Westside Chicago, and Helena María Viramontes’ East Los Angeles—sharpen Latino literary criticism’s long-standing focus on urban and regional spaces in narrative by zooming in on neighborhood streets, while building on contemporary theories of transnationalism to analyze the broader cultural implications of local migrancy. By grounding the effects of transmigrancy in concrete locations, “Find Yourself Here” presents a comprehensive vision of the US Latino immigrant experience without generalizing from its myriad versions and numerous sites.

APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
16

L'Clerc, Lee. "Painting and visual imagery in literature, three contemporary Latin American novels." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0015/NQ41201.pdf.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
17

Ubilluz, Juan Carlos. "Sacred eroticism : Georges Bataille and Pierre Klossowski in Latin American literature /." Full text (PDF) from UMI/Dissertation Abstracts International, 2002. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/fullcit?p3086724.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
18

Spear, Keith. "A genetic model of duality in Latin American magical realism /." View online, 1995. http://repository.eiu.edu/theses/docs/32211998781347.pdf.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
19

Murillo, Edwin. "Uncanny Periphery: Existential(ist) Latin American Narratives of the 1930s." Scholarly Repository, 2009. http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/267.

Full text
Abstract:
This dissertation investigates the narrative practice of Latin American Existentialism. My project tracks the structures, themes, and interpretations of Existentialism across national borders in the belief that a common expression exists which is distinctly Latin American. I begin this philosophical cartography, with four Existential(ist) novels produced in Latin America during the 1930s. Specifically, I will examine the Existentialist quality of Enrique Labrador Ruiz's El laberinto de si­ mismo (1933), Mari­a Luisa Bombal's La ultima niebla (1934) and La amortajada (1938), and Graciliano Ramos's Angustia (1936). These narratives are analyzed in relation to the core thematic of Existential philosophy. I read these narratives as Existential(ist) because they are of, relating to and characterized by a philosophy of existence, and because they simultaneously produce an Existential discourse. My study is, at one level, comparative in that I pursue the points of emergence of Existentialism's prominent categories not only across national borders, but also across disciplines. I relate the tradition of Latin American thought in the first half of the 20th century and Existential philosophy from Europe to collectivize the thematic points of contact. These I contrast with our literary production of the 1930s. By emphasizing the particularities and continuations of Latin America's contribution to the Existential canon I, in effect, periodize an era which is foundational in the history of Latin American literature. Furthermore, by acknowledging the literary presence of Latin American Existentialism we can appreciate the explicit narrative interrogation of the Self through aesthetic, ethical, and ontological parameters.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
20

Stone, Thomas. "Rewriting the "Great Man" Theory: Historiographic Critique in Spanish American Literature." Diss., Temple University Libraries, 2018. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/489746.

Full text
Abstract:
Spanish
Ph.D.
This dissertation is a survey of postmodern historical fiction in 20th and 21st century Spanish American literature. It has diverse manifestations, but the defining characteristic of this kind of historical fiction is a rejection of any rigid distinction between historical and fictional discourse. This is a descriptive rather than a normative study: it examines how eight different authors use the techniques of postmodern historical fiction to develop implicit critiques of the “great man” theory of history. The Scottish writer Thomas Carlyle popularized this theory in the 1800s, and it asserts that biography is the proper model for history, namely, the biography of prominent individuals – “great men.” It treats these people as the source of history. Opposing this historiographic ideology, many authors of postmodern historical fiction see such figures as subjects that can be “written” and “re-written”; they are not the source of history, but the product of historical discourse. I conduct close readings of nine primary texts to elucidate how they challenge the “great man” historiography of four significant figures from Spanish American history: Montezuma, Simón Bolívar, Christopher Columbus, and Ernesto “Che” Guevara. I conclude that the historiographic critiques in these texts converge around three common strategies in their critiques: an extension of character from the domain of fiction to the domain of history, the subversion of the literary genres of biography and autobiography, and a commitment to rewriting the traditional narratives of specific historical events.
Temple University--Theses
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
21

Gollnick, Brian. "The bleeding horizon : subaltern representations in Mexico's Lacandón Jungle /." Diss., Connect to a 24 p. preview or request complete full text in PDF format. Access restricted to UC campuses, 1998. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/ucsd/fullcit?p9913152.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
22

Baillon, Florence. "Altérité pour les romancières latino-americaines (1950-1990)." Lille : Atelier national de reproduction des thèses, 1997. http://catalog.hathitrust.org/api/volumes/oclc/68945326.html.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
23

Rojcewicz, Stephen J. "Our tears| Thornton Wilder's reception and Americanization of the Latin and Greek classics." Thesis, University of Maryland, College Park, 2017. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10260313.

Full text
Abstract:

I argue in this dissertation that Thornton Wilder is a poeta doctus, a learned playwright and novelist, who consciously places himself within the classical tradition, creating works that assimilate Greek and Latin literature, transforming our understanding of the classics through the intertextual aspects of his writings. Never slavishly following his ancient models, Wilder grapples with classical literature not only through his fiction set in ancient times but also throughout his literary output, integrating classical influences with biblical, medieval, Renaissance, early modern, and modern sources. In particular, Wilder dramatizes the Americanization of these influences, fulfilling what he describes in an early newspaper interview as the mission of the American writer: merging classical works with the American spirit.

Through close reading; examination of manuscript drafts, journal entries, and correspondence; and philological analysis, I explore Wilder’s development of classical motifs, including the female sage, the torch race of literature, the Homeric hero, and the spread of manure. Wilder’s first published novel, The Cabala, demonstrates his identification with Vergil as the Latin poet’s American successor. Drawing on feminist scholarship, I investigate the role of female sages in Wilder’s novels and plays, including the example of Emily Dickinson. The Skin of Our Teeth exemplifies Wilder’s metaphor of literature as a “Torch Race,” based on Lucretius and Plato: literature is a relay race involving the cooperation of numerous peoples and cultures, rather than a purely competitive endeavor.

Vergil’s expression, sunt lacrimae rerum et mentem mortalia tangunt [Here are the tears of the world, and human matters touch the heart] (Vergil: Aeneid 1.462), haunts much of Wilder’s oeuvre. The phrase lacrimae rerum is multivocal, so that the reader must interpret it. Understanding lacrimae rerum as “tears for the beauty of the world,” Wilder utilizes scenes depicting the wonder of the world and the resulting sorrow when individuals recognize this too late. Saturating his works with the spirit of antiquity, Wilder exhorts us to observe lovingly and to live life fully while on earth. Through characters such as Dolly Levi in The Matchmaker and Emily Webb in Our Town, Wilder transforms Vergil’s lacrimae rerum into “Our Tears.”

APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
24

Tipton, Keny Elizabeth Garcia-Corales Guillermo. "El nuevo historicismo y la otredad en la narrativa contemporánea nicaragúense : el caso de Sergio Ramírez = New Historicism and Otherness in contemporary Nicaraguan narrative: the case of Sergio Ramírez. /." Waco, Tex. : Baylor University, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2104/4192.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
25

Duran-Cerda, Dolores Maia. "La voz del silencio femenino en la poesia de Marjorie Agosin." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/289040.

Full text
Abstract:
This dissertation is a close thematic and theoretical study of the function and effect of multifaceted silence as manifested by a chorus of female voices in several poems by the contemporary Chilean-American writer Marjorie Agosin. The investigation, which focuses on five collections of her poetry published between 1984 and 1994, explores the power of silence by considering the development of imposed and self-imposed silence that reflects on stereotypes, taboos and censorship. In turn, this process reveals how women in traditional representations have been silenced by social, cultural and/or political constraints. This study traces the evolution of various and diverse female voices who speak freely and openly of their personal existential situations which, in turn, reflect, encarnate, and finally create the collective female experience as women learn to shatter silence and be heard in their own way and with their own voices. Chapter one examines female representations from fairy tales and folklore in Brujas y algo mas (1984). Agosin revises these female characters and their actions and language so that all break with the traditional roles assigned to them thereby assuming their own identity and voice. The critical ideas of Alicia Ostricker form the theoretical foundation used to illustrate how revising myths may serve as an instrument to dismantle old female stereotypes and instead create new and authentic female representations. The testimonial voices from dictatorships in Chile and Argentina depicted in Las zonas del dolor (1988) and Circulos de locura: Madres de la Plaza de Mayo (1992) are studied in chapter two. The analysis focuses on how these female voices speak to the silence of their forgotten existence as victims of death, disappearances, torture and sexual terrorism and express personal and collective loss. The theoretical works of Elaine Scarry and Ximena Bunster help demonstrate the physical and psychological effects suffered by silenced political prisoners and the mothers who search for them. Female erotic self-expression in Hogueras (1990) is the focus of chapter three. Employing the theoretical concepts of Helene Cixous and Alicia Ostricker, the study shows the manner in which Agosin's intensely provocative and impassioned language gives voice to silences stemming from socio-cultural taboos and self-imposed censorship. Thus, by taking control of their sexuality these voices take control of female expression as each freely explores female as self. In the fourth and final chapter of this dissertation, imposed and self-imposed silence in Dear Anne Frank (1994) is studied. Here Agosin's female voices enter into an epistolary dialogue with the young girl in order to reconstruct Jewish memory and the Holocaust. The critical ideas of Rachel Feldhay Brenner, Andrew Vogel Ettin, Dori Laub and Andre Neher inform the discussion. In sum, Agosin's poetry uses the symbolic geography of zones, circles, bodies, photographs and diaries to break the limits of female silence. By revising the representation of woman, the poet gives her a new and powerful voice. This in turn allows a collaborative effort between Agosin and her readers to participate fully in the personal and collective female expression and experience.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
26

Bañales, Victoria M. "Twentieth-century Latin American and U.S. Latina women's literature and the paradox of dictatorship and democracy /." Diss., Digital Dissertations Database. Restricted to UC campuses, 2005. http://uclibs.org/PID/11984.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
27

Bachmann, Rachel E. "Germans and Latin Americans trade places intercultural experience and writing against dictatorship /." [Bloomington, Ind.] : Indiana University, 2008. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:3344552.

Full text
Abstract:
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Indiana University, Dept. of Germanic Studies, 2008.
Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on Oct 5, 2009). Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 70-02, Section: A, page: 0575. Adviser: Marc Weiner.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
28

Palomino, Teddy F. "Literatura dentro de la literatura: La reflexion del oficio literario en la obra de Roberto Bolaño." The Ohio State University, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1449228045.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
29

Quintana, Gonzalez Desimarie. "La Reescritura del Heroe en El Sueno del Celta de Mario Vargas Llosa." Thesis, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras (Puerto Rico), 2018. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10745109.

Full text
Abstract:

Esta investigación explora, a través de la novela de El sueño del celta (2010) de Mario Vargas Llosa, una nueva postura sobre lo que implica ser un héroe. El cuestionamiento que surge sobre el concepto heroico es lo que posibilita examinar la composición heroica del personaje principal de El sueño del celta, Roger Casement. Se conceptualizó al personaje como un héroe moderno, ya que el rasgo que lo identifica es su carácter contradictorio. Para demostrar la caracterización de Casement como héroe moderno se estudiaron diversas instancias narrativas que representaban tanto los rasgos heroicos como antiheroicos. También se examinó la ambigüedad del personaje a través de sus textos escritos y por medio de la construcción narrativa de la obra.

A través de este estudio se llegó a la conclusión de que Roger Casement, forma parte de la disgregación épica del héroe que propuso Mijaíl Bajtín. Según la teoría de Bajtín, Casement como héroe novelesco se caracterizó como un personaje inconcluso y con múltiples matices. Lo que permitió demostrar que los géneros literarios como la épica y la novela pueden influenciar en cómo se constituyen los personajes heroicos. En fin, en esta investigación se cuestiona la conceptualización del héroe tradicional trabajada por Hugo Francisco Bauzá en su libro El mito del héroe: morfología y semántica de la figura heroica y por Joaquín M. Aguirre en su artículo Héroe y sociedad: El tema del individuo superior en la literatura decimonónica. Tanto Bauzá como Aguirre sostienen que el héroe clásico manifiesta juicios elevados de valor, no son cobardes ni sienten miedo, sino más bien exteriorizan los rasgos heroicos más elevados. Entre ellos, el móvil ético de su acción, la transgresión, la ilusión, el sentido de mediación, el valor, el deseo de vencer, el sentido de búsqueda, el valor que los demás le otorgan, entre otros.

No obstante, la nueva postura heroica que presenta El sueño del celta propone que el verdadero heroísmo no consiste en carecer de miedo, sino en superarlo. Ya que el verdadero héroe es aquel que, a pesar de ser consciente de todas sus deficiencias, como el miedo y la debilidad, logra superar y enfrentar los problemas. Son estas características las que permiten presentar a Roger Casement como un héroe en contraposición al héroe tradicional al mostrar un carácter contradictorio y aproximarse a la ambigüedad de la condición humana.

APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
30

Mejia, Melinda. "Reading home from exile| Narratives of belonging in Western literature." Thesis, State University of New York at Buffalo, 2014. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3629800.

Full text
Abstract:

Reading Home from Exile: Narratives of Belonging in Western Literature analyzes the way in which narratives of belonging arise from Western literary works that have been largely read as works of exile. This dissertation insists on the importance of the concept of home even in the light of much of the theoretical criticism produced in the last fifty years which turns to concepts that emphasize movement, rootlessness, homelessness, and difference. Through readings of Western literature spanning from canonical ancient Greek texts to Mexican novels of the revolution and to Chicano/a literature, this study shows that literature continues to dwell on the question of home and that much of the literature of exile is an attempt to narrate home. Beginning with a close reading of Oedipus the King and Oedipus at Colonus, the first chapter discusses Oedipus's various moments of exile and the different spheres of belonging (biological/familial, social, political) that emerge through a close reading of these moments of exile. Chapter 2 examines these same categories of belonging in Mauricio Magdaleno's El resplandor, an indigenista novel set in post-revolutionary Mexico about the trials and tribulations of the Otomi town of San Andres. Chapter 3 continues to consider literature that takes Revolutionary and post-revolutionary Mexico as setting and analyzes the narratives of belonging that arise in Juan Rulfo's Pedro Páramo and Elena Garro's Recollections of Things to Come. Finally, Chapter 4 analyzes the emergence of these categories of home in Chicano/a literature and thought, focusing on Gloria Anzaldua's Borderlands/La Frontera and its relation to Homi Bhabha's concept of hybridity and to postcolonial theory in general.

APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
31

Hubert, Rosario. "Disorientations. Latin American Fictions of East Asia." Thesis, Harvard University, 2014. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:11566.

Full text
Abstract:
This dissertation explores the relationship between fiction, knowledge and "knowing" in Latin American discourses of China and Japan. By scrutinizing Brazilian and Hispanic American travel journals, novels, short stories and essays from the nineteenth century to the present, Disorientations engages with the epistemological problems of writing across cultural boundaries and proposes a novel entryway into the study of East Asia and Latin American through the notions of "cultural distance," "fictional Sinology" and "critical exoticism."
Romance Languages and Literatures
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
32

Rodriguez, Collado Aralis Mercedes. "Images of invasions and resistance in the literature of the Dominican Republic." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2015. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/5945/.

Full text
Abstract:
From 1492, when the first European invaders set foot on the island known today as Hispaniola, until 1965, the year of the April Revolution, the multi-faceted repercussions of invasion have been a prevalent theme within the Dominican Republic’s literature. This thesis examines how the country has amalgamated a roller-coaster past to reflect this in its writing. It starts by evaluating the Spanish invaders’ extermination of the Tainos, its generational influence and the continued impact of Trujillo’s legacy, highlighting the issue of gender within the Resistance movement. It presents a rigorous analysis of writers’ opinions, as transmitters of peoples’ views – from the pirate attack by Francis Drake, to the use of theatre by Independence fighters as a weapon of propaganda against the Haitian invasion; the resilience of peasant-culture represented in the guerrilla movement against the first U.S. invasion of the 20th century; to the exposition of novels to depict a dictator as an ‘invader from within’ and the use of poetry to face the bullets of the U.S. invasion of 1965. By analysing the literary images, expressions, statements and social commitment of the writers throughout their work, this study shows how the various invasions which occurred in the Dominican Republic have been rooted in Dominican discourse. It emphasises that these very struggles against invasion are at the core of its vibrant literature, providing its silent themes and serving to illuminate both the nation as a whole and the individuals within it.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
33

Martinez-Raguso, Michael. "(De)forming woman| Images of feminine political subjectivity in Latin American literature, from disappearance to femicide." Thesis, State University of New York at Buffalo, 2015. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3725958.

Full text
Abstract:

The question at the root of this study is why the political formation of state power in Latin America always seems to be accompanied by violence against women. Two threads run throughout: an analysis of the relation between image, violence, and subject formation; and the application of this theory to the political violence exerted upon feminine subjectivity in relation to state formation in Latin America. I trace the marginalization of women through experimental dictatorial fiction of the Southern Cone up to the crisis of femicide that has emerged alongside the so-called narco-state in Mexico in the wake of NAFTA. I argue that Latin American feminist thought has sought to articulate itself as a post-hegemonic force of interruption from within the dominant order, a project that is problematized in the face of the perverse seriality of the femicide crimes and the intolerable yet enigmatic power of which they become a forced representation.

The first chapter stages a close reading of Salvador Elizondo’s Farabeuf (1965), locating in the novel’s engagement with a photograph of the Chinese Leng Tch’é execution a theory of the relation between cut, image, and the female body that understands the subtraction of the feminine as the foundation of the political. The second chapter turns to the structure of dictatorial violence in Argentina, looking at Alejandra Pizarnik’s La condesa sangrienta (1965) and Luisa Valenzuela’s “Cambio de armas” (1982) alongside the Argentine Revolution and the Dirty War, respectively. Pizarnik’s meditation on Elizabeth Bathory’s crimes highlights both the fetishization of the subversive body and the inevitable failure of sovereign power to designate itself. Valenzuela’s fragmentary story deconstructs the notion of erasure at the heart of the regime’s use of forced disappearance by staging a perverse sexual relation within an environment of domestic confinement. The third chapter examines Diamela Eltit’s critique of neoliberalism during the Pinochet regime in Chile through her cinematographic novel Lumpérica (1983) before following this economic trail northward to the femicide crisis that has ravaged the Mexican-U.S. border since 1993. I demonstrate that both oppressive power structures—official and unofficial—are founded on the fusion of economic and gender violence. A reading of Roberto Bolaño’s 2666 through the notion of the exquisite corpse situates this urgent crisis in relation to globalization and the postmodern world of images, technology, efficiency, and instantaneity for which it becomes a disturbing emblem.

APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
34

Doran, Melissa K. "(De)Humanizing Narratives of Terrorism in Spain and Peru." The Ohio State University, 2014. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1398994906.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
35

Hey-Colon, Rebeca L. "Sea-ing Words: An Exploration of the Maritime in Contemporary Caribbean and Latino/a Literature." Thesis, Harvard University, 2014. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:11408.

Full text
Abstract:
My dissertation Sea-ing Words: An Exploration of the Maritime in Contemporary Caribbean and Latino/a Literature analyzes how writers from the Spanish-speaking islands and their diaspora have moved past the ever elusive Pan-Antillean quest for unity, rooted in the acceptance of a foundational Trauma (with a capital T). The writers I examine venture to humanize the basin, highlighting the routes, exchanges, and negotiations that currently distinguish the region. In doing so, the idea of one edifying Trauma is displaced by the existence of multiple and individualized iterations. As marginalized discourses infiltrate the center, the flow of the conversation is altered, opening up spaces for new interactions. Through their uses of the maritime, these writers transform the sea into a stage from which new perspectives on Caribbean and Latino/a literature emanate.
Romance Languages and Literatures
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
36

Arroyo, Calderon Patricia. "Cada uno en su sitio y cada cosa en su lugar. Imaginarios de desigualdad en America Central (1870-1900)." The Ohio State University, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1437570606.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
37

Ulloa, Esmeralda. "Fashioning Sovereignty in Latin American Narrative." Thesis, Harvard University, 2011. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10006.

Full text
Abstract:
With the arrival of the Europeans, the dressed body became a discursive forum upon which to negotiate the possession of land and the legitimate right to govern in Latin America. In conquest chronicles, the Aristotelian notion that mother nature marked the bodies of those she destined for slavedom came to be applied as a primary discursive tool to justify Spain’s claim to sovereignty. Amerindian forms of dress (or lack thereof) served as visual markers of mental and moral inferiority, lack of civic principles, and an inability of indigenous peoples to self-govern. This study examines the persistence of these impressions of inferiority in modern day body politics. It also questions the applicability of concepts imported from Europe that are involved in the configuration of sovereignty as its formulation changed from something imposed by the conquest to a political principle upon which Latin America’s political communities defined themselves. I analyze the representation of politically charged bodies in four 20th century narratives that dialogue with three crucial moments in the evolution of sovereignty in Latin America (the conquest, the independence movements, and modern-day popular revolutions). Drawing from recent political theory, which views sovereignty as a continually evolving multifaceted social practice involving a wide variety of cultural and legal practices, this dissertation examines the complex processes by which bodies, both physical and symbolic, become vested with political significance. In response to Moira Gatens’s work, which argues that just as theory has abandoned neutral and abstract conceptualizations of material bodies, bodies politic should similarly be examined as historically situated practices determined by specific power relations (gender, class, race, etc.); I propose that we, scholars of Latin American Studies, must find the equivalent of what Luce Irigaray, referring to women’s bodies, calls ‘our body’s language.’ This dissertation observes that the link between sovereignty and the dressed body in Latin America begs further examination, and that we must develop a set of terms and concepts that capture the specific cultural, political and ideological circumstances behind how the body performs at a material and symbolic level in Latin America’s quest toward sovereignty.
Romance Languages and Literatures
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
38

Mason, Sofia Sandina Maniscalco. "Testimonio as counter-propaganda : a comparative analysis of Latin-American women's testimonial literature." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 2014. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14199/.

Full text
Abstract:
This thesis creates a gendered typology of women’s testimonio that foregrounds the Cold War context of the genre. This new perspective reveals that contrary to the assertions of some critics, the texts struggle to convey a unitary propagandic message. Rather, their prime purpose is to counter hegemonic discourse. Yet, far from being unliterary or impersonal, they impart much personal information using a diversity of stylistic devices. The testimonios challenge the profoundly gendered national security discourse of their own governments and the US. The argument that brutal counter-insurgency tactics, widespread incarceration and torture, were necessary to combat “communist-inspired” insurgency is invalidated by these testimonios which replace dichotomising and reductionist Cold War propaganda with accounts of the local, subjective and personal reasons for political involvement. The texts disclose the potentially traumatising lived consequences of US foreign policy and national security strategies to reveal their disproportionate and excessive nature. However, the testimonialistas’ sense of a greater purpose, collective identity and belonging to a wider community enables them to remain resilient in spite of adverse experiences. Despite their loyalty to utopian and egalitarian ideals, sexism from within leftist movements and governments is exposed and denounced by the female protagonists as patriarchal institutions, traditions and gendered identities are consistently undermined. Latin American women, as guerrilleras, organisers and members of peasant and indigenous communities, present themselves as defiant protagonists who, aside from the male-dominated master narratives of the superpowers, demonstrate the strength of their political agency, psychological resilience and ideological convictions.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
39

Cisneros, James R. "Technologies of reception, on the adaptation of Latin American literature to the cinema." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2000. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp02/NQ56465.pdf.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
40

Mordoch, Gabriel. "New Christian Discourse and Early Modern Portuguese Oceanic Expansion: The Cases of Garcia da Orta, Fernao Mendes Pinto, Ambrosio Fernandes Brandao and Pedro de Leon Portocarrero." The Ohio State University, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu150231925234443.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
41

Munoz, Solano Nefer. "Novelando en el Periódico y Reporteando en la Novela de América Latina." Thesis, Harvard University, 2013. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10908.

Full text
Abstract:
This study investigates the imbrications and porosity between journalism and narrative fiction in Latin America. It examines how three journalist-writers, Afonso de Lima Barreto (Brazil), José Marín Cañas (Costa Rica) and Gabriel García Márquez (Colombia) write in a fluid double-sided process of textual creation during the twentieth century. In their journalistic production, these writers include characters or situations that are false or imagined and, at the same time, while working in newspapers, write novels based on their journalistic reports. This discursive dialogism results in works with different degrees of hybridity that relativize the argument of those who see rigid boundaries between journalism and literature in Latin America. The literary figure of the journalist-writer, who produces narrative fiction while simultaneously working full-time for newspapers, magazines and news services, is a deeply rooted tradition in Latin American letters. In this study, special attention is given to the complex deployment of reference, hyperbole, deception and lying. During the twentieth century, when Latin American newspapers wanted to appear less political and more commercial to their readers, the journalist-writers continually masked their political views under the cloak of a fact-oriented journalistic discourse. This dissertation analyzes genre borders and develops concepts like "favela de las letras" ("Favela" in contradistinction to the Republic of Letters) and "diarismo magico" ("magical journalism"). The dissertation also examines the conundrums of verisimilitude raised by the imbrication of journalism and literature referred to above. The notion "magical journalism," which echoes "magical realism" yet structurally is more akin to the ambivalence that Tzvetan Todorov detects in the fantastic, produces its effect by the doubt that arises from the tangle of two principles of decoding: the realist, naturalist one that is expected of journalism and the preternatural. The latter is not the realm of the supernatural, as in marvelous verisimilitude, but ensues from apparently immeasurable political power, which in the texts of these writers is presented not only in a realist mode but coded through literary devices like allusion, allegory, hyperbole. In this way, the texts both refer to a concrete reality and simultaneously register it in a literary mode that produces astonishment, consternation and a range of effects of verisimilitude.
Romance Languages and Literatures
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
42

Feldman, Hernán. "La cultura amurallada tecnologias de la exclusion en la Argentina moderna (1876--1930) /." [Bloomington, Ind.] : Indiana University, 2005. http://wwwlib.umi.com/dissertations/fullcit/3163024.

Full text
Abstract:
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Indiana University, Dept. of Spanish and Portuguese, 2005.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 66-02, Section: A, page: 0607. Adviser: Kathleen A. Myers. Title from dissertation home page (viewed Oct. 18, 2006).
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
43

Vela, Cordova Roberto J. "El horizonte poetico en tres obras de Raul Zurita "Purgatorio", "Anteparaiso" y "La vida nueva" /." [Bloomington, Ind.] : Indiana University, 2005. http://wwwlib.umi.com/dissertations/fullcit/3212701.

Full text
Abstract:
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Indiana University, Dept. of Spanish and Portuguese, 2005.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 67-03, Section: A, page: 0951. Adviser: Luis Davila. "Title from dissertation home page (viewed March 21, 2007)."
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
44

Nuno-Avila, Anthony J. "El sujeto de la posmodernidad en la narrativa de Manuel Puig." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280099.

Full text
Abstract:
This dissertation identifies and analyzes the characteristics of postmodern literary discourses written by Argentinean writer Manuel Puig. As part of this analysis, I identify and correlate the sociohistorical circumstances which shaped and influenced Puig's writings and the postmodern subject embedded in his progressive narratives. As part of the objectives of this research, I have included a critical theoretical perspective of the development of modern Eurocentric subject and its effects on Latin American societies. Four literary texts are analyzed to specifically identify and point out how Manuel Puig created a complex postmodern narrative, in which the author problematized issues of gender, power, authority and sexual orientation: La traicion de Rita Hayworth, Pubis Angelical, Sangre de amor correspondido and El beso de la mujer arana. In chapter one, the critical foundation of the European modern subject is layed out in order to understand the effects of Descartes' Cogito, ergo sum upon the establishment and legitimation of the rational subject. The diffusion, incorporation and imposition of Cartesian rationalism in Latin American societies are also analyzed to further understand how Latin America's elite looked towards European and the United States of America in an effort to emulate and import new advances in technology, science and education. This chapter also includes an analysis of the failures of eurocentric postulations, methods and philosophies in Latin American societies during the second half of the twentieth century as the metropolitan centers faced the first manifestation of postmodernity. Chapter two focuses on the "transgressive" elements of Puig's first novel, as the author offers a dystopian view of an Argentinean family and its community. The author departs from traditional narrative models and creates an innovative literary text, in which the characters speak and narrate directly, their experiences and events in their lives. In this postmodern literary text, the author disrupts the hegemonic central order to reconfigure a new hierarchy, these disruptive themes will continue in his other works, as the postmodern subject reconfigures his/her strategic place in a new social hierarchy. The third chapter concentrates on Puig's feminist discourse: the application of feminist theoretical postulations provides an understanding of how this type of Latin American feminist discourse incorporate the experiences of an Argentinean woman as she struggles in a patriarchal system that in the past silenced her both as a woman and as a subject. In chapter four, a deconstructive theoretical framework proves useful during this analysis of El beso de la mujer arana, in this text Manuel Puig addresses issues of sexual orientation, concepts of masculinity and issues of power, control and authority in Latin America. Additionally, this chapter incorporates a critical view of the contestatory voices during the postmodern era, specifically when the diverse of Latin American subaltern voices, previously silenced, come forward to affirm their presence in Argentinean and other Latin American societies, as well as in the official literary cannon.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
45

Gómez, Manuel Negrete. "La subconsciencia colectiva en la novela "Pedro Paramo"de Juan Rulfo." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/280547.

Full text
Abstract:
The academic interest of this study is to establish the relevance and pertinence of Juan Rulfo's novel, Pedro Paramo, in the literary canon of western tradition. To accomplish our goal we will consider Rulfo's text in light of Carl Gustav Jung's analytical psychology, in particular the concepts of the archetypes and the collective unconscious, to demonstrate that the types and world presented in Rulfo's novel adhere to classical literary types of western tradition. We will use Jung's theory of the collective unconscious to show that what has been considered purely Mexican represents an extension of the themes and topics of interest in western tradition. To prove our point we will consider texts that are part of the literary canon of western tradition, such as: La epica de Gilgamesh; John Keats poem, "La Belle Dame Sans Merci"; Rainer Maria Rilke's poems, "Sonnets to Orpheus" and "Orpheus, Euridice, Hermes"; Ovidio's, La metamorfosis ; and Virgilio's Georgicas; as well as biblical selections in comparison and contrast to Rulfo's text. This study will establish that Juan Rulfo's work is an expression of the communal experience that concerns western literary tradition.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
46

Hjelm, Ruth. "La violencia en cuatro obras de Elena Poniatowska." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/289104.

Full text
Abstract:
This dissertation deals with the theme of violence in four works by Elena Poniatowska: Tinisima, La noche de Tlatelolco, Fuerte es el silencio, and Hasta no verte Jesus mio . It consists of an analysis on the way in which violence is to be found in the four narratives by Poniatowska, as applies the theory of effect of Hans Robert Jauss in the principal area of analysis. The method of analysis is carried out in pairs: Hasta no verte Jesus mio and Tinisima, due to the fact that both of these works are novels in which the protagonists are of female gender, as opposed to: La noche de Tlatelolco and Fuerte es el silencio which are testimonial works in which the theme of violence is of an intensive political nature throughout the whole book. Because of the magnitude and complexity of violence, the nature of violence is explained with an interdisciplinary approach in order to cover its multidimensional framework within the four works. There is an emphasis on the way that violence perpetrates the lives of the female characters, even though the study includes the presence of violence in the lives of the male characters with whom they interact, as well as in the political environment in which they exist. The major contribution of this dissertation is the fact that it is the first so far, to study violence as the main theme in four works by Elena Poniatowska, and which with an interdisciplinary approach to the explanation of violence, promotes the interaction of literature with other areas of study to bring about a more complete analysis and understanding of social issues in literature, such as the study of violence. In the four works by Poniatowska studied in this dissertation we may also take into consideration the fact that the author deals with violence in historical events, and that the main characters are real life characters whose lives are written in the midst of a hostile and volatile environments.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
47

Lasso-von, Lang Nilsa. "A historical and sociopolitical approach to works by the Panamanian Bertalicia Peralta." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/298808.

Full text
Abstract:
This dissertation is a historical and a sociopolitical approach to Bertalicia Peralta's poetic and narrative discourse. Our analysis includes selections from her poetic collections Dos poemas, Himno a la alegria, Libro de las fabulas, Casa flotante, Piel de gallina, Invasion U.S.A., 1989: Cronicas de una memoria and three short stories from her book Puros cuentos. The particular contribution of this study is to recognize and introduce Peralta as an outstanding writer, poet, journalist and educator. In chapter one, we approach this study with the help of a personal interview, direct correspondence with the author and studies on revolutionary philosophies. Chapter two centers its attention on Panamanian history and how it's reflected in Peralta's work. The third chapter focuses on Panamanian sociopolitical issues. It shows the strategies and conventions employed by the author. Among the critical references used to support Peralta's commitment to humanity in general are the ideas of James Iffland, Louis Althusser, Goran Therborn, Terry Eagleton, John Beverley, Marc Zimmerman and others. Finally, in the fourth chapter the works of Mariblanca Staff Wilson, CODEHUCA's research on human rights and literary feminist criticism are used in order to illustrate and represent the role of women in Peralta's work. This dissertation concludes accepting her written discourse as a literary expression that promotes an understanding of our society. For the above reasons, her work is a true literary contribution, worthy of scholarly attention.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
48

Garcia, Joseph Manuel. "La literatura cubanoamericana y su imagen: Identidad, transculturacion y exilio en la produccion de tres escritores. Oscar Hijuelos, Cristina Garcia y Elias Miguel Munoz." Diss., The University of Arizona, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/298814.

Full text
Abstract:
La literatura cubanoamericana a pesar de ser un fenomeno aparentemente muy reciente es uno de los mejores testimonios de este inmigrante en Norteamerica. Sin embargo, no ha sido posible hasta los anos noventa encontrar algunos de los exponentes literarios que mejor han sabido representar esa experiencia en la narrativa. Tomando en consideracion la hibridez contemporanea de "teoria cultural" y su manifestacion sociohistorica asi como los estudios de varios sociologos e historiadores de la experiencia sociocultural cubana, el proposito de este trabajo es examinar como la hipotesis cultural de Michael Ryan se manifiesta en la produccion de varios narradores cubanoamericanos que han intentado exponer la realidad cultural de este inmigrante en la literatura. Los escritores que consideraremos en este estudio son los novelistas Oscar Hijuelos, Cristina Garcia y Elias Miguel Munoz quienes mejor constancia han dejado de sus experiencias y han sabido reflejar el dilema de temas como la transculturacion del inmigrante cubano, la busqueda de la identidad de sus descendientes y la realidad del exilio y la revolucion que ha marcado la condicion ideologica de muchos cubanos en Norteamerica.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
49

McCloskey, Jason A. "Epic conflicts culture, conquest and myth in the Spanish Empire /." [Bloomington, Ind.] : Indiana University, 2008. http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&res_dat=xri:pqdiss&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:3350507.

Full text
Abstract:
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Indiana University, Dept. of Spanish and Portuguese, 2008.
Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on Oct. 8, 2009). Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 70-03, Section: A, page: 0890. Adviser: Steven Wagschal.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
50

Ojeda, Zuniga Patricia. "Voz de fe, voz de razon: Lectura critica del "Evangelio Americano"." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/27162.

Full text
Abstract:
Dans cette etude, on aborde l'essai en tant qu'espace dialogique ou convergent des contradictions et des tensions discursives antagoniques envers l'ordre etabli. Dans cette perspective, nous presentons une analyse critique-discursive de l'essai intitule El Evangelio Americano, dernier ouvrage de l'essayiste et penseur politique chilien Francisco Bilbao Barquin (1823-1865). En prenant comme point de depart la theorie du dialogisme de Mikhail Bakhtine et le lien qu'on y etablit entre signe linguistique et ideologie, nous proposons ici une approche de l'oeuvre de Bilbao dans laquelle on met en evidence les processus d'ideologisation qui marquent les relations de reaction, d' incorporation et de transformation de textes et de discours. Notre these comprend trois chapitres. Nous explorons d'abord, au premier chapitre, les notions theoriques qui permettent d'etablir le lien entre essai, discours et ideologie. Ensuite, au deuxieme chapitre, nous examinons le contexte historique et social qui sous-tend la production de l'oeuvre. Enfin, au troisieme chapitre, nous presentons une analyse des processus discursifs de reproduction du systeme des idees sociales, politiques et religieuses que partagent l'enonciateur textuel et le(s) interlocuteur(s). En bref, la lecture critique d'El Evangelio Americano vise a demontrer la relation multiforme que l'enonciateur entretient avec divers discours de son epoque: dans certains cas, il adhere a ces discours; dans d'autres, il en differe totalement ou partiellement. Nous soulignons aussi la pertinence des outils theoriques utilises en analysant brievement les possibilites et les avantages qu'ils offrent.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
We offer discounts on all premium plans for authors whose works are included in thematic literature selections. Contact us to get a unique promo code!

To the bibliography