62,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
payback
31 °P sammeln
  • Gebundenes Buch

In this intelligent monograph for women's studies, literature and Latin American studies, Lyn Di Iorio Sandin asserts that there is a significant ambivalence surrounding identity that is present in the works of Latino writers such as Cristina Garcia, Edward Rivera, and Abraham Rodriguez. Sandin incorporates the theories of allegory and 'double identity' to talk about fragmentation of the Latino psyche. What Sandin finds compelling is that in all of the works of this diverse group of writers, there is a common theme of anxiety about origins that manifests itself through the symbols of dead…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In this intelligent monograph for women's studies, literature and Latin American studies, Lyn Di Iorio Sandin asserts that there is a significant ambivalence surrounding identity that is present in the works of Latino writers such as Cristina Garcia, Edward Rivera, and Abraham Rodriguez. Sandin incorporates the theories of allegory and 'double identity' to talk about fragmentation of the Latino psyche. What Sandin finds compelling is that in all of the works of this diverse group of writers, there is a common theme of anxiety about origins that manifests itself through the symbols of dead women, ghosts, or madwomen. Using specific examples from literature ranging from Cuban American Cristina Garcia's The Aguero Sisters to Puerto Rican Rosario Ferre's Maldito amor , Sandin finds that fragmented ethnic identification is an area that is just beginning to be explored within the analysis of U.S. Latino fiction.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
LYN DI IORIO SANDIN is Assistant Professor in the English Department of City College, City University of New York, USA.
Rezensionen
"There is no other work in contemporary U.S. Latino/Latina Studies, known to me, that is comparable to Killing Spanish in scope, in analytical richness and in sheer trans-American thinking; it is actually a cross-genealogical history of U.S. Latino/Latina literature from Piri Thomas to Cristina García and Junot Díaz and shows a passionate mastery of the literature of the Americas." - José David Saldívar, Class of 1942 Professor of English, University of California, Berkeley

"Killing Spanish is an illuminating examination of contemporary US Latino writing. Lyn Di Iorio Sandín combines a comprehensive and revealing cultural study analysis with a compelling literary review of the manner in which allegory, in the works of some of the most significant authors in the growing field of US Latino literature, reveals an often ambivalent and conflictive representation of Latino/a identity. A highly original and timely work." - Margarite Fernández Olmos, Co-Editor, The Latino Reader: An American Literary Tradition from 1542 to the Present

"Lyn Di Iorio Sandin's Killing Spanish ventures remarkably into uncharted territory, appreciably widening the available scope for studying US Caribbean/Latino literary texts. Drawing on psychoanalytically nuanced literary criticism and contemporary cultural studies, the author identifies allegory as the trope par excellence for scrutinizing the fragmented identities that parade the pages of the novels she examines and in sodoing illustrates the value of attending to rhetorical and aesthetic features as critical tools capable of unleashing the cultural and political meaning of Latino literature. She investigates the role of Spanish as a site in relation to which her writers construct notions of family, national origins, and cultural roots, while considering the possible rapport between the allegorical realism of the Latino fiction writers covered in her study and the magical realism of the major Latin American figures one might regard as their literary ancestors. Clearly written and sensitively argued, this study provides a fresh inquiry into the distinct behavior of US Caribbean/Latino literary texts. One the whole we have here a scholarly intervention that, in steering clear of the overused explanatory conventions to which Latino texts are habitually subjected, constitutes an invigorating contribution to the field." - Silvio Torres-Saillant, Director of the Latino-Latin American Studies Program, Syracuse University "Lyn Di Iorio Sandin's Killing Spanish is remarkable for its breadth in identifying eight characteristics of US Latino/a allegory as a lens for an in-depth analysis of seven authors and texts. In doing so, she also shows the resonance and limitations of Euro-Anglo, Third World, Hemispheric, and minority theories as applied to Latino/a works...[she] frames her collection of essays with the compelling assertion that while both the ambivalence and the fragmented subjectivity it causesremain irrevocable, they become sources not only of vulnerability and struggle, but also of energy, motivation and strength...Ultimately, Di Iorio Sandin seems to do for Latino/a literary critique what she claims these 'street allegorists' do for the literature: they unveil layers of fluid identity, never made whole nor fetishized; she emphasizes the literary richness of complex subjectivities....[she] both enlarges and refocuses these spheres of analysis. She does so by employing psycho-analytical and allergorical approaches and by critically applying post-modern literary and cultural theory to examine the multiple layers involved in 'killing Spanish' and in the ambivalent identity that seems to require such violence." - Latino Studies Journal

"The archive with all its theoretical implications so central in different ways to Gruesz's and Sanchez Gonzalez's respective projects, gives way in Lyn Di Iorio Sandin's dazzling study, Killing Spanish: Literary Essays on U.S. Latino/a Ambivalent Identity, which deals with destabilizing relationships, language, and allegory in contemporary Latino fiction...What we are left with both in Di Iorio Sandin's exquisite study and the writers she investigates is a Latino complexity whose unapologetic presence imposes itself on the U.S. literary canon." - The Centro Journal

…mehr