Religaciones hispano-americanas en torno del 98: Los usos de La Tempestad en el Modernismo [Darío y Rodó]

With the 'Disaster' in 1898, Latinamerican Modernism's anti-imperialist reaction involved the revisión of its cultural affiliations. As is well known, the Hispanism and Latinism deployed in Modernist writing have been frequently criticized as symptoms of a persistent 'colonialism...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Olivar (La Plata) 2010-06, Vol.11 (14), p.71-91
1. Verfasser: Bonfiglio, Florencia
Format: Artikel
Sprache:spa
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:With the 'Disaster' in 1898, Latinamerican Modernism's anti-imperialist reaction involved the revisión of its cultural affiliations. As is well known, the Hispanism and Latinism deployed in Modernist writing have been frequently criticized as symptoms of a persistent 'colonialism'. This paper analyzes the relationships established between Latinamerican and Spanish writers from the 98 Defeat on -which were in turn promoted by peninsular Hispanism since the 400th Anniversary Festivities in 1892- and the way in which Modernist writers, faced with a situation that confirmed Saxon hegemony and 'Latin decadence', reconsider the links with Spain. In this context the anti-imperialist reading of Shakespeare's Tempest [Darío's "El Triunfo de Calibán" and Rodó's Ariel] becomes a powerful relinking phenomenon around which the relationships with the former 'Mother Land' are debated. For Modernist writers, according to our reading, the union with Spanish intellectuals entailed strengthening a common literary system in the internationalized literary market. In such a system, Darío's leadership by the turn of the century and the possibility for Latinamericans to compete on a par with the Spanish were becoming self-evident.
ISSN:1515-1115
1852-4478
1852-4478