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date: 10 December 2024

Literature and National Formation in 19th-Century Latin Americalocked

Literature and National Formation in 19th-Century Latin Americalocked

  • Andrea CastroAndrea CastroUniversity of Gothenburg
  • , and Kari Soriano SalkjelsvikKari Soriano SalkjelsvikUniversity of Bergen

Summary

There is more to the formation of a nation than the political reforms needed for the construction of a national state. To create a sense of national belonging, a collective consciousness among citizens is as crucial, and literature plays an important role in this effort. Issues connected to literature—its relation to Europe, the dangers of imitation, the creation of literary histories, the institutionalization of language, the role of translation, and so on—were discussed all over Latin America during the 19th century. Authors tried to pave the way for literary expressions that could give form to their national specificity. Literature sought to showcase the nation’s history, customs, people, national symbols, and landscapes—from mountains and valleys to cities and pueblos. In so doing, it engaged with an unruly and changing historical, cultural, and ideological space.

Subjects

  • Latin American and Caribbean Literatures
  • 19th Century (1800-1900)
  • Cultural Studies

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