Manuel Zapata Olivella and the "darkening" of Latin American LiteratureUniversity of Missouri Press, 2005 - 148 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 1
... important to understand that the cultural, social, political, and economic textual circumstance has a genesis dating back to the arrival of the first Africans in the New World. Thus, in order to better understand this author and his ...
... important to understand that the cultural, social, political, and economic textual circumstance has a genesis dating back to the arrival of the first Africans in the New World. Thus, in order to better understand this author and his ...
Página 2
... important factor affecting the African was the declining and dying indigenous population, which provided the first source of free “manual labor” required by the first European invaders. As the law of supply and demand dictated, the need ...
... important factor affecting the African was the declining and dying indigenous population, which provided the first source of free “manual labor” required by the first European invaders. As the law of supply and demand dictated, the need ...
Página 4
... importance of this writer and his emerging reputation in the canon of literary masterworks. A BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF MANUEL ZAPATA OLIVELLA In Black Writers in Latin America (1979), Richard Jackson documents the development of literary ...
... importance of this writer and his emerging reputation in the canon of literary masterworks. A BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF MANUEL ZAPATA OLIVELLA In Black Writers in Latin America (1979), Richard Jackson documents the development of literary ...
Página 6
... important markers on the author's road to maturity both as a man and as a writer. Alegría tells of the au- thor's encounters with U.S. troops in Panama, his experiences on a ba- nana plantation in Costa Rica, his posing as a Cuban boxer ...
... important markers on the author's road to maturity both as a man and as a writer. Alegría tells of the au- thor's encounters with U.S. troops in Panama, his experiences on a ba- nana plantation in Costa Rica, his posing as a Cuban boxer ...
Página 8
... important na- tional ( and international ) writer is being recognized . In 2000 , the minis- ter of culture sanctioned a reprinting of his Pasión and He visto as a singular work as a national tribute to the writer . The minister of ...
... important na- tional ( and international ) writer is being recognized . In 2000 , the minis- ter of culture sanctioned a reprinting of his Pasión and He visto as a singular work as a national tribute to the writer . The minister of ...
Contenido
10 | |
Chapter II | 25 |
La Calle 10 En Chimá and Chambacú | 45 |
Chapter IV | 70 |
Chapter V | 86 |
Chapter VI | 110 |
Conclusion | 126 |
Bibliography | 133 |
Index | 141 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Manuel Zapata Olivella and the "darkening" of Latin American Literature Antonio D. Tillis Vista previa limitada - 2005 |
Manuel Zapata Olivella and the "darkening" of Latin American Literature Antonio D. Tillis Vista de fragmentos - 2005 |
Términos y frases comunes
Additionally aesthetic African ancestry African descent African diaspora Afro-Colombian Afro-Hispanic Agne America Antoñete Bogotá Chambacú Changó chapter characters Chimá claves Colombian colonial concept cultural depicts discourse Ebony Path Espitia essays ethnic European exploitation explored Father Berrocal fiction focus Harlem Hemingway heritage hijo Hispanic historical historiographic metafiction hombre hunger Hutcheon identity ideology Indian indigenous inhabitants Jorge José Raquel Kenya Kikuyo Latin American literature Levántate Linda Hutcheon literary magical realism major Manuel Zapata Olivella María Marvin Lewis Máximo ment mestizos metafiction Mexican miscegenation mixed mulato narrative voice narrator nature negro North American novel oppression Parmenio plight political postcolonial postmodernism presented protagonist race racial racism reader reality region religion religious Renata representation reveals Richard Jackson Ruperta Sacred Mammal saint scholars Secos sexual Sinú River Sinú River valley slavery social Spanish Tenth Street thematic theme Tierra tion traditions Treading the Ebony tri-ethnic United violence World writer Yoruba