Description

Book Synopsis
My book draws on studies shows how the neo-baroque can be understood as a strategy that allows artists in Latin America and the Caribbean to rearticulate the imperial, colonialist gaze of globalization.

Trade Review
In The Fantasy of Globalism, John Waldron brings together texts that are often read in terms of the Neo-baroque and combines these with some unexpected choices to demonstrate how these writers engage with imperial, colonial representations of Latin American and the Caribbean throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Waldron’s dynamic and insightful readings of authors such as Alejo Carpentier, Gabriel García Márquez, Ana Lydia Vega, Judith Ortiz Cofer, and Mayra Montero, in conjunction with contemporary theoretical ideas about globalization which he roots in the baroque, create a dialogue among old and new voices and a much-needed revision of concepts such as magical realism. The scope of Waldron’s project is impressive, and he tackles it with intelligence, acumen, and compassion. His book adds another intriguing perspective to the on-going conversation about Latinamericanism today. -- Jill S. Kuhnheim, University of Kansas
John Waldron's book brings together disparate critical perspectives in current Latin Americanist practice. Ranging from Alejo Carpentier to Mayra Montero, from Severo Sarduy to Antonio Viego, Waldron picks up the pieces of twentieth-century practice and weaves them into a reading strategy for the twenty-first. His choices in both fiction and criticism span a generational gap in Latin Americanism by reading 'classic' texts and criticism in the context of globalization, which allows Waldron to revive Magical Realism from its commodified tomb. Waldron's erudite, insightful readings and articulate prose then redeploy Magical Realism and contemporary Latin Americanism to destabilize the crippling hegemony of the present. -- Marcus Embry, University of Northern Colorado

Table of Contents
Table of Contents: Introduction Chapter 1: Globalization, the Neobaroque and the Gaze Chapter 2: El reino de este mundo and the Ghost of Haiti Chapter 3: The National Symptom in Three Puerto Rican Authors: René Marqués, Ana Lydia Vega and Judith Ortiz Cofer Chapter 4: An Interlude: Magical Realism and Failed Incorporation Chapter 5: The Vanishing Real: Magical Realism’s Political Swerve in García Márquez’s “La increíble y triste historia de la cándida Eréndira y su abuela desalmada” Chapter 6: Engaging the Darkness in Mayra Montero’s Tú, la oscuridad

The Fantasy of Globalism The Latin American

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    A Hardback by John V. Waldron

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 12/16/2013 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739177761, 978-0739177761
      ISBN10: 0739177761

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      My book draws on studies shows how the neo-baroque can be understood as a strategy that allows artists in Latin America and the Caribbean to rearticulate the imperial, colonialist gaze of globalization.

      Trade Review
      In The Fantasy of Globalism, John Waldron brings together texts that are often read in terms of the Neo-baroque and combines these with some unexpected choices to demonstrate how these writers engage with imperial, colonial representations of Latin American and the Caribbean throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Waldron’s dynamic and insightful readings of authors such as Alejo Carpentier, Gabriel García Márquez, Ana Lydia Vega, Judith Ortiz Cofer, and Mayra Montero, in conjunction with contemporary theoretical ideas about globalization which he roots in the baroque, create a dialogue among old and new voices and a much-needed revision of concepts such as magical realism. The scope of Waldron’s project is impressive, and he tackles it with intelligence, acumen, and compassion. His book adds another intriguing perspective to the on-going conversation about Latinamericanism today. -- Jill S. Kuhnheim, University of Kansas
      John Waldron's book brings together disparate critical perspectives in current Latin Americanist practice. Ranging from Alejo Carpentier to Mayra Montero, from Severo Sarduy to Antonio Viego, Waldron picks up the pieces of twentieth-century practice and weaves them into a reading strategy for the twenty-first. His choices in both fiction and criticism span a generational gap in Latin Americanism by reading 'classic' texts and criticism in the context of globalization, which allows Waldron to revive Magical Realism from its commodified tomb. Waldron's erudite, insightful readings and articulate prose then redeploy Magical Realism and contemporary Latin Americanism to destabilize the crippling hegemony of the present. -- Marcus Embry, University of Northern Colorado

      Table of Contents
      Table of Contents: Introduction Chapter 1: Globalization, the Neobaroque and the Gaze Chapter 2: El reino de este mundo and the Ghost of Haiti Chapter 3: The National Symptom in Three Puerto Rican Authors: René Marqués, Ana Lydia Vega and Judith Ortiz Cofer Chapter 4: An Interlude: Magical Realism and Failed Incorporation Chapter 5: The Vanishing Real: Magical Realism’s Political Swerve in García Márquez’s “La increíble y triste historia de la cándida Eréndira y su abuela desalmada” Chapter 6: Engaging the Darkness in Mayra Montero’s Tú, la oscuridad

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