University Press Copublishing Division / Bucknell University Press
Pages: 262
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-61148-464-9 • Hardback • September 2012 • $121.00 • (£93.00)
978-1-61148-465-6 • eBook • September 2012 • $115.00 • (£88.00)
Subjects: History / Americas (North, Central, South, West Indies),
History / United States / 19th Century,
History / Latin America / South America,
History / Modern / 19th Century,
History / Social History,
Literary Criticism / American / General,
Literary Criticism / American / Hispanic American,
Literary Criticism / Caribbean & Latin American
Elisabeth L. Austin is Assistant Professor of Spanish at Virginia Tech.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Problematics of Exemplary Discourse in 19th-Century Spanish America
OneFrom Postcolonial Subjects to Ambivalent Exemplars: Creole Subjectivity in 19th-Century Spanish-American Narrative
TwoCreole Paternalism and Ambivalent National Subjectivity in Eugenio Cambaceres
ThreeExemplary Modernism: The Science of Decadence in José Asunción Silva’s De sobremesa
FourMonstrous Progeny: Fragile National Ideologies in José Martí’s Lucía Jerez
FiveIdeological Psychosis and Impotent Compassion in Clorinda Matto de Turner
SixModeling Multiplicity: Gender and Authority in Juana Manuela Gorriti’s Cocina ecléctica
Conclusion:Reading Creole Subjects
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
In this dense study, Austin (Virginia Tech) widens and deepens understanding of the dynamics of reading in late-19th-century Spanish American prose literature. Essentially, she studies aspects of the reading practices and their corresponding cultural matrices of a period that--following the establishment of independent republics in most of the continent--saw the full emergence of the Creole writing subject. The hybridity of this subject is a constant concern for the author, who offers chapters on major texts along with little-known works by writers including Eugenio Cambaceres, Domingo Sarmiento, Jose Asuncion Silva, José Martí, Clorinda Matto de Turner, and Juana Manuela Gorriti. Positing that allegory and example are major tropes through which the reader's agency is enacted, Austin convincingly argues for the need to focus on the pertinence of exemplarity. For Austin, the example, from Count Don Manuel on, has called for mimetic modeling not always recognized in Hispanic literatures. She argues for "the necessity of reading exemplarity as an inherently inconclusive and contradictory means of guidance" in texts ranging from biography to novels to, surprisingly, Gorriti's 1890 cookbook Cocina eclectic (1890), an apparently exotic text that is fully appropriate as a balance to what Austin calls the "national-decadent-gendered-interventionist novels" she analyzes earlier. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty.
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