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El. knyga: History of Mexican Poetry

Edited by , Edited by , Edited by (University of Houston)
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 21-Mar-2024
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108924696
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 21-Mar-2024
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781108924696
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Covering Mexican literary history from pre-Columbian literature to the twenty-first-century, including works from Greater Mexico, this book is the most comprehensive study on Mexican poetry available in English. It examines key authors, such as Bernando de Balbuena, Juana de Asbaje, Ramón López Velarde, José Gorostiza, and Octavio Paz, and considers how they should be read today. Individual chapters focus on important movements, poetic forms, and topics, such as epics, lyric poetry, romanticism, modernism, poetry and performance, poetry in indigenous languages, Mexican American and Chicanx poetry, and the relationship between Mexican literature and gender. This book provides a global understanding of Mexican poetry, its institutions and its main authors for students and scholars in any discipline connected to the subject.

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This book provides a global understanding of Mexican poetry, its institutions and its main authors.
Introduction. José Ramón Ruisįnchez Serra, Anna M. Nogar and Ignacio M.
Sįnchez Prado;
1. The practice of epic and lyric writing in colonial Mexico
Jorge Téllez;
2. La lķrica del Fénix: Sor Juana's poetic legacy Anna M.
Nogar;
3. The sound of the word: music and social transgression in lyric
poetry from the colonia onward Jesśs Ramos Kittrell;
4. We, the romantics
José Ramón Ruisįnchez Serra;
5. Sentimental sociabilities: the young
romantics and their long-lived widows Lilia Granillo Vįzquez;
6. Modernismo's
strategic occidentalism. Notes on Manuel Gutiérrez Nįjera, Amado Nervo, and
José Juan Tablada Ignacio M. Sįnchez Prado;
7. The crepusculars: Criollo
modernism and the invention of the literary province Luis Vicente de
Aguinaga;
8. Poesķa en voz alta: a trajectory of poetry and performance in
México Jill S. Kuhnheim;
9. The great synthesis of the critical poets: the
rise of paz Anthony Stanton;
10. Octavio paz and the institutions of poetry
Įngel M. Dķaz;
11. The form that contains multitudes: the Mexican long poem
(1924-2020) Tamara R. Williams;
12. Radical freedoms: neobaroque, Postpoetry
Jacobo Sefami;
13. The age of Anthology Alejandro Higashi;
14.
Twentieth-century Mexican poetry: the popular and the political Seminario de
Investigación en Poesķa Mexicana Contemporįnea;
15. Poetry in indigenous
languages: from the sixteenth to the twenty-first centuries Mónica Quijano
Velasco;
16. Chicanx poetry: the living lyric Anita Huķzar-Hernįndez;
17.
Racimos: dissonances in Mexican poetry of today Cristiįn Gómez Olivares;
Index.
José Ramón Ruisįnchez Serra is Associate Professor of Latin American Literature and Theory at the Department of Hispanic Studies of the University of Houston. He is the author of Historias que regresan: topologķa y renarración en la primera mitad del siglo XX mexicano (Fondo de Cultura Económica 2012). He has edited Libro mercado (Universidad Iberoamericana 2015); and coedited Juan Villoro ante la crķtica (Candaya 2014) with Oswaldo Zavala, and A History of Mexican Literature (Cambridge 2016) with Ignacio Sįnchez Prado and Anna M. Nogar. His second monograph is La reconciliación: Roberto Bolańo y la literatura de amistad en América Latina, (UNAM 2019). More recently he published Torres (ERA 2021), a book length essay about the image in poetry and the visual arts. Anna M. Nogar is Professor of Hispanic Southwest Studies in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of New Mexico. She researches colonial Mexican literature and its readers, and engages in Mexican American cultural and literary studies, focusing on New Mexico. Her most recent book is a prizewinning edition and translation of 19th century New Mexican poetry, El feliz ingenio neomexicano: The Life and Writing of Felipe M. Chacón (2021). Nogar is the author of Quill and Cross in the Borderlands: Sor Marķa de Įgreda, 1628- the Present (2018), and editor of A History of Mexican Literature (2016) and Colonial Itineraries of Contemporary Mexico: Literary and Cultural Inquiries (2014). She authored with Enrique Lamadrid the prizewinning historical bilingual young readers book Sisters in Blue/Hermanas de azul (2017). Ignacio M. Sįnchez Prado is the Jarvis Thurston and Mona de Duyn Professor in Humanities at Washington University in St. Louis. He is the author of Naciones intelectuales. Las fundaciones de la modernidad literaria mexicana (1917-1959) (2009), Intermitencias americanistas: Ensayos académicos y literarios (2004-2009) (2012), Screening Neoliberalism. Transforming Mexican Cinema 1988-2012 (2014), and Strategic Occidentalism: On Mexican Fiction, The Neoliberal Book Market and the Question of World Literature (2018). He is also editor of A History of Mexican Literature (with Anna M. Nogar and José Ramón Ruisįnchez, 2016), Mexican Literature in Theory (2018) and Pierre Bourdieu in Hispanic Literature and Culture (2018).