This book draws on comparative, historical, and postcolonial reading strategies, focusing on the cultural networks and aesthetic dialogues that developed between European and non-European writers. It explores texts concerned with exile, space, empire, colonization, reception, translation, human subjectivity, and modernist exp
This book draws on comparative, historical, and postcolonial reading strategies, focusing on the cultural networks and aesthetic dialogues that developed between European and non-European writers. It explores texts concerned with exile, space, empire, colonization, reception, translation, human subjectivity, and modernist exp
Patricia Novillo-Corvalán is Senior Lecturer in Comparative Literature at the University of Kent at Canterbury, UK.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. Pablo Neruda's Transnational Modernist Networks: Colombo-Madrid-London-Buenos Aires 2. Empire and Commerce in Latin America: Historicising Virginia Woolf's The Voyage Out 3. Whose Joyce? Whose Modernism? Borges, Bolaño, and the Question of the 'Ulyssean' Novel 4. The Reluctant Translator: Beckett's Road to Mexico (via Paz) 5. The Politics of Death in Mexico: Manet, Lowry, Bolaño and the Ghost of Emperor Maximilian Coda: Towards Modernist Dialogues in the Global South
Introduction 1. Pablo Neruda's Transnational Modernist Networks: Colombo-Madrid-London-Buenos Aires 2. Empire and Commerce in Latin America: Historicising Virginia Woolf's The Voyage Out 3. Whose Joyce? Whose Modernism? Borges, Bolaño, and the Question of the 'Ulyssean' Novel 4. The Reluctant Translator: Beckett's Road to Mexico (via Paz) 5. The Politics of Death in Mexico: Manet, Lowry, Bolaño and the Ghost of Emperor Maximilian Coda: Towards Modernist Dialogues in the Global South
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