Welcome to our book review site go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

Understanding Roberto Bolaño
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 248

Understanding Roberto Bolaño

In Understanding Roberto Bolaño, Ricardo Gutiérrez-Mouat offers a comprehensive analysis of this critically acclaimed Chilean poet and novelist whose work brought global attention to Latin American literature in the 1960s unseen since the rise of García Márquez and magic realism. Best known for The Savage Detectives, winner of the Rómulo Gallegos Prize; the novella By Night in Chile; and the posthumously published novel 2666, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award, Bolaño died in 2003 just as his reputation was becoming established. After a brief biographical sketch, Gutiérrez-Mouat chronologically contextualizes literary interpretations of Bolaño’s work in terms of his l...

Jose Donoso
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 249

Jose Donoso

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1992-01-08
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

Ricardo Gutierrez Mouat, "Jose Donoso: An Introduction and Checklist"/Ricardo Gutierrez Mouat, "Beginnings and Returns: An Interview with Jose Donoso"/Jose Donoso, "A Small Biography of The Obscene Bird of Night"/Jose Donoso, "Nobody Wears Fedoras Anymore"/Marco Antonio de la Parra, "Portrait of a Donoso Apprentice"/Alastair Reid, "Meta-Donoso"/Antonio Benitez Rojo, "The Obscene Bird of Night as a Spiritual Exercise"/Luisa Valenzuela, "From Manuela to the Marchioness the Writer Moves on Guarded (or not) by the Dogs of Desire"/Djelal Kadir, "Next Door: Writing Elsewhere"/Marjorie Agosin, "The Poems of Jose Donoso"/Fernando Alegria, "Good-bye to Metaphor: Curfew"/Marie-Lise Gazarian Gautier, "...

Authorizing Fictions
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 140

Authorizing Fictions

A critique of the Chilean novelist's A House in the country, studying particularly its representation of the many-faceted concept of `authority'. Casa de campo combines the techniques of traditional novels with the 20th-century intermingling of reality and fiction. The novel's central theme of authority as figured in the discourse, its play between reality and illusion, and its dialogue with literature and society as a whole form the subject of this study. Murphy explores the illusory authority of the narrator in controlling characters' voices, and establishes a parallel with the characters'contradictory power over each other; the ploys of the narrator recall and parody the authoritarian regime which is reflected in the novel. The narrator's authority is further defined in a reading of the novel in which author, narrator, reader and character become linguistic constructs in a textual play, and meanings emerge at variance with the authorized commentary. MARIE MURPHY is an Assistant Professor of Spanish at Loyola College in Maryland.

Thomas Mann's Death in Venice
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 325

Thomas Mann's Death in Venice

Study of the critical reception of one of the most famous and widely read works of modern literature. Thomas Mann's 1912 novella Death in Venice is one of the most famous and widely read texts in all of modern literature, raising such issues as beauty and decadence, eros and irony, and aesthetics and morality. The amount and variety of criticism on the work is enormous, and ranges from psychoanalytic criticism and readings inspired by Mann's own homosexuality to inquiries into the place of the novella in Mann's oeuvre, its structure and style, and its symbolism and politics. Critics have also drawn connections between the novella and works of Plato, Euripides, Goethe, Schopenhauer, Platen, W...

Understanding José Donoso
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 214

Understanding José Donoso

Chilean writer José Donoso is one of a handful of authors inevitably mentioned in relationship to the 'boom' in Spanish American literature during the 1960s and 1970s. His name is frequently linked with those of other Latin writers such as García Márquez, Vargas Llosa, Fuentes, Rulfo, and Cortázar. Like his contemporaries, Donoso blends the physical and the psychological in his fiction. The perceptions of his characters are constantly changing. For Donoso, 'reality' is a state of mind always subject to the imagination, and nothing is stable.

Latin American Literature and Mass Media
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 346

Latin American Literature and Mass Media

This volume examines Latin American literature in the context of a complimentary audiovisual culture dominated by mass media such as photography, film, and the Internet. The articles gathered here, all of them published for the first time, critically assess Latin American media theories (Garcia Canclini et al.), pointing out their strengths and shortcomings; show how literary works have been able to sustain their visibility in a highly competitive media ecology, accommodating to pop and mass culture while at the same time reaffirming the authority of the literary intellectual. Overall, the book's foregrounding of the impact of mass media on Latin American literature opens the critical debate on an increasingly essential subject.

Mario Vargas Llosa and the Persistence of Memory
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 140

Mario Vargas Llosa and the Persistence of Memory

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2006
  • -
  • Publisher: UNMSM

Editado en idioma inglés, este tributo a Mario Vargas Llosa y sus obras reúne los ensayos preparados en su honor, en la Universidad de Hofstra, noviembre del 2003. También se incluye dos entrevistas y una selecta bibliografía.

Neobaroque in the Americas
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 434

Neobaroque in the Americas

In a comparative and interdisciplinary analysis of modern and postmodern literature, film, art, and visual culture, Monika Kaup examines the twentieth century's recovery of the baroque within a hemispheric framework embracing North America, Latin America, and U.S. Latino/a culture. As "neobaroque" comes to the forefront of New World studies, attention to transcultural dynamics is overturning the traditional scholarship that confined the baroque to a specific period, class, and ideology in the seventeenth century. Reflecting on the rich, nonlinear genealogy of baroque expression, Neobaroque in the Americas envisions the baroque as an anti-proprietary expression that brings together seemingly disparate writers and artists and contributes to the new studies in global modernity.

Strange Affinities
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 382

Strange Affinities

Collection of essays that use queer studies and feminism as a lens for examining the relationships between racialized communities.

A Companion to Gabriel García Márquez
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 202

A Companion to Gabriel García Márquez

This book offers discussion and analysis of the subtle writing of Nobel Laureate Gabriel García Márquez - a traditionalist who draws from classic Western texts, a Modernist committed to modernizing the conservative literary tradition in Colombia and Latin America, an internationally recognized major writer of the 1960s Boom, the key figure in popularizing what has been called "magic realism" and, finally, a Modernist who has occasionally engaged in some of the strategies of the postmodern. The author demonstrates that García Márquez is above all a committed and highly accomplished Modernist fiction writer who has successfully synthesized his political vision in his writing and absorbed a...