The Vanishing Frame: Latin American Culture and Theory in the Postdictatorial Era: Border Hispanisms
Autor Eugenio Claudio Di Stefanoen Limba Engleză Hardback – 3 aug 2018
Di Stefano demonstrates that while artists such as Diamela Eltit, Ariel Dorfman, and Albertina Carri develop a concept of justice premised on recognizing victims’ experiences of torture or disappearance, they also ignore the injustice of economic inequality and exploitation. By examining how artists such as Roberto Bolaño, Alejandro Zambra, and Fernando Botero not only reject an aesthetics of experience (and the politics it entails) but also insist on the work of art as a point of departure for an anticapitalist politics, this new reading of Latin American cultural production offers an alternative understanding of recent developments in Latin American aesthetics and politics that puts art at its center and the postdictatorship at its end.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781477316184
ISBN-10: 1477316183
Pagini: 200
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: University of Texas Press
Colecția University of Texas Press
Seria Border Hispanisms
ISBN-10: 1477316183
Pagini: 200
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: University of Texas Press
Colecția University of Texas Press
Seria Border Hispanisms
Notă biografică
Eugenio ClaudioDi Stefano is an associate professor of Spanish at the University of Nebraska at Omaha.
Cuprins
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Freedom at the End of the Postdictatorial Era
- Part 1. Postdictatorial Aesthetics
- Chapter 1. From Revolution to Human Rights
- Chapter 2. Disability and Redemocratization
- Chapter 3. Making Neoliberal History
- Part 2. Toward a Politics of the Frame
- Chapter 4. The Reappearance of the Frame
- Chapter 5. Anti-intentionalism and the Neoliberal Left
- Chapter 6. Literary Form Now
- Coda: The Victim, the Frame
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index
Recenzii
[The Vanishing Frame's] main novelty lies in the fact that the theoretical argumentation is founded on an anticapitalistic perspective in contradiction with what the author labels as the human rights Left…I recommend in the strongest possible terms that this essay be included as required reading for any graduate course on Latin American History or Literature dealing with the topics of human rights, dictatorships, and artistic/literary representations.
One of the most important merits of...The Vanishing Frame [is] its force to make visible an old discussion between ethics and aesthetics, between representation of catastrophe and horizons of justice.
An ambitious work that weaves together a wide array of disciplinary discourses and approaches...valuable for its ambition to perform interdisciplinary criticism in literary studies, art history, political theory, and cultural criticism...I would suggest this book to scholars who are interested in the interaction of affect, aesthetics, and politics in Latin American dictatorial and postdictatorial literature and visual art since the late 1970s. On the other hand, the book speaks not only to scholars of Latin American culture and literature but also to students and scholars interested in the relationship between aesthetics, politics, and theory more broadly.
There is no doubt in my mind that The Vanishing Frame is one of the most important theoretical works of criticism to be published in the field of Latin American literature in the last few years. Not only because it is successful in its critique of the connection between human rights politics and the emergence of a neoliberal period in South America, but also because, in the process, it gives us a reading of the evolution of Latin Americanism since the end of the last century.
An ambitious entry into debates on postdictatorial literature and neoliberal aesthetics...The Vanishing Frame’s thought-provoking approach to thinking through identity politics and human rights discourse will no doubt initiate rigorous and much-needed debate about the future of the Left in literary and cultural studies. This book will be of interest to scholars of Latin American literary studies, human rights, trauma and memory studies, neoliberalism and aesthetics, and affect theory.
Descriere
Examining the works of writers and artists such as Roberto Bolaño, Fernando Botero, Pablo Larraín, and Alejandro Zambra, this pathfinding book challenges postdictatorial aesthetics by focusing on the concept of aesthetic autonomy as a critique of economic inequality.