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6 - Whither Latinidad?

The Trajectories of Latin American, Caribbean, and Latina/o Literature

from Part II - The Roots and Routes of Latina/o Literature

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 February 2018

John Morán González
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Austin
Laura Lomas
Affiliation:
Rutgers University, New Jersey
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Summary

As an unstable term, latinidad requires a multiplicity of interpretations, given the many chronological and geographical sites of its enunciation, and the many racial, social, and cultural realities that abound in the movements from Latin America, the Caribbean, to other parts of the world. Focusing on José Martí’s “Nuestra América” from 1891, Justo Sierra’s En tierra yankee (notas a todo vapor) from 1895, and Rubén Darío’s “A Roosevelt” (published in 1905), this essay explores the question of latinidad as a collective opposition against forms of colonialism that were emerging in this pivotal moment in American hemispheric history. Studying these texts in their specificity enables further reflections on the limits and promises of bodies of work we have come to identify as belonging to national literary traditions, or to “Latina/o” or “Latin” American” textual bodies, while allowing us to retain a sense of the specific histories and geographies of a polyvalent latinidad.
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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