fbpx
Wikipedia

Argentine literature

Argentine literature, i.e. the set of literary works produced by writers who originated from Argentina, is one of the most prolific, relevant and influential in the whole Spanish speaking world, with renowned writers such as Jorge Luis Borges, Julio Cortázar, Leopoldo Lugones and Ernesto Sábato.

History edit

Origins edit

As a matter of fact, the name of the country itself comes from a Latinism which first appeared in a literary source: Martin del Barco Centenera's epic poem La Argentina (1602). This composition runs 10.000 verses and describes the landscape as well as the conquest of the territory. The word was reintroduced in Argentina manuscrita, a prose chronicle by Ruy Díaz de Guzmán.

Argentine literature began around 1550 with the work of Matías Rojas de Oquendo and Pedro González de Prado (from Santiago del Estero, the first important urban settlement in Argentina), who wrote prose and poetry. They were partly inspired by oral aboriginal poetry—in particular, according to Carlos Abregú Virreyra, by the lules, juríes, diaguitas and tonocotés. A symbiosis emerged between the aboriginal and Spanish traditions, creating a distinct literature, geographically limited (well into the 18th century) to the Argentine north and central regions, with the province of Córdoba as its center, due to the foundation of the National University of Córdoba. Two names stand out from this period: Gaspar Juárez Baviano, and Antonia de la Paz y Figueroa, also known as "Beata Antula".

Gradually, with the economic prosperity of the port, the cultural axis moved eastward. The letters of the colonial age (Viceroyalty-neoclassicism, baroque and epic) grew under the protection of the independentist fervor: Vicente López y Planes, Pantaleón Rivarola and Esteban de Luca.

During the 17th century, Argentine baroque literature was poor in comparison with that from Europe and some other parts of the New World. The only remarkable poet of this period was fray José Luis de Tejeda who wrote Coronas líricas and El peregrino de Babilonia

Cultural independence from Spain edit

 
The salon of the 1837 generation.

As in the rest of the continent, strong feelings of emancipation from Spain were present in Argentina. Before independence, some neoclassical authors such as Juan Cruz Varela produced numerous works related with this revolutionary spirit but still under the paradoxical Spanish domain.

Argentina's true break with Spanish tradition was manifested in literature through the adoption of French romanticism as a model, postulating the return to popular sources and to the medieval. This aesthetic and intellectual was brought by Esteban Echeverría who wrote the first local and realistic story, El Matadero ("The slaughterhouse"), as well as the nativist poem La Cautiva ("The Captive"), with the Pampas as its background. His barbed wit and opposition to powerful Buenos Aires governor Juan Manuel de Rosas forced him into exile.

In the middle of the 19th century José Mármol published the first Argentine novel, Amalia (1851–1852), a historical novel set during the dark year of 1840 which mixed fictional characters (Amalia, Daniel Bello, Eduardo Belgrano) with actual historical characters like Juan Manuel de Rosas.[1]

As Rosas' power increased, more literary works from the opposition were produced, such as Juan Bautista Alberdi's play El Gigante Amapolas, a good example of local sainete. In the genre of essay, Domingo Faustino Sarmiento published his Facundo, a particular (re)vision of Facundo Quiroga's life from a deterministic point of view. Sarmiento conveyed aspects of sociology and semiotics in this analysis.

Echeverría, Mármol and Sarmiento are among the group of writers known as Generación del 37, who are considered the first generation of local intellectuals.

Poetry lessened in combative spirit and turned towards the anecdotal and sentimental: Carlos Guido y Spano and Ricardo Gutiérrez, the chronicle writers of folk literature. Lucio V. Mansilla published in 1870 Una excursión a los indios ranqueles, a sort of chronicle of a voluntary expedition to sign a peace treaty with the Indians. His work (enrolled in a realistic aesthetic) anticipated Generación del '80, which would be deeply influenced by modernism. Juana Manuela Gorriti was one of the first popular female writers, mainly due to her melodramatic narrative works like the novel La hija del mazorquero and the foundation of La alborada, a cultural magazine.

Literatura Gauchesca edit

 
Cover of Martín Fierro by José Hernández, 1894 edition.

European-oriented, indeed Euro-centric, themes and styles would remain the norm in Argentine letters, especially from Buenos Aires, during this century. The (romantic) poetry as La cautiva or the latter Santos Vega by Rafael Obligado gave a lot of importance to the nature of the pampa,[2] sharing some elements with a picturesque, imitation-gaucho literature, purporting to use the language of the gauchos and to reflect their mentality. The first current is known as poesía nativista (nativist poetry) and became a literary tradition. The second (known as poesía gauchesca) developed in parallel as a part of that generation's understanding of national identity. Although it also is a product of literary authors, this writing takes the voice of the gaucho as protagonist from the beginning. Gauchesca is related to payador's singing, a payador being a modern equivalent of the illiterate medieval singers. A payador's work, in opposition to gauchesca, is sung spontaneously.[3]

The first gauchesco author was Bartolomé Hidalgo who wrote during the war of independence and therefore his works had a strong political ideology. His compositions were mainly cielitos (payadoresque songs but with provocative political messages) and diálogos patrióticos (conversations between two characters about current affairs).

In a second period, gauchesca was influenced by political-faction fights. Estanislao del Campo, and Hilario Ascasubi are the most representative writers of this period. Del Campo wrote Fausto, a poem which has been read both as a parody of gauchesca and an intelligent joke towards city people.[4] In the poem, Anastasio El Pollo meets a friend and tells him his impressions on particular event: he has seen the Devil. What El Pollo doesn't know (or pretends he doesn't) is that all he saw was actually an opera performance at Teatro Colón.[5]

The last author of gauchesca is José Hernández, the author of Martín Fierro. Gauchesca leaves its political influences and becomes social in the sense that gauchos are disappearing, mainly due to Sarmiento and the new economic model. Hernández is considered the responsible for consolidating the gauchesco style.

Generation of 1880 edit

The generation of 1880 emphasized the European color and cultural supremacy of Buenos Aires. The migratory current of mixed ethnicity accentuated the change of the big village for the cosmopolitan metropolis. The poetry of this period is lyric: Leopoldo Díaz y Almafuerte. The latter usually depicts the worker's life in passionate attacks against the contradictions of contemporary society. Almafuerte (pseudonym of Pedro Bonifacio Palacios) was also a teacher and a journalist whose opinions and articles gave him a lot of problems.

Essay is a recent genre that developed in the late 19th century: José Manuel Estrada, Pedro Goyena and Joaquín V. González.

Narrative works oscillated between social issues and folk literature. The predominant tendency was Realism, best represented by Miguel Cané in his autobiographical novel Juvenilia. Other writers influenced by realism were Lucio V. Mansilla, Francisco Sicardi, Benito Lynch and Carlos María Ocantos. Naturalism was also an important tendency towards the end of the century. Argentine Naturalism was commanded by Eugenio Cambaceres in his novels Sin rumbo and Música sentimental, almost forgotten today. Cambaceres was inspired by Émile Zola's theory about the naturalistic approach to literary work, but its ideology suffered considerable alterations. Julián Martel and Antonio Argerich with ¿Inocentes o culpables? added a highly loaded moral touch to Argentine naturalism.

Modern edit

 
Adolfo Bioy Casares, Victoria Ocampo and Jorge Luis Borges in Mar del Plata, 1935.

Towards the end of the 19th century, led by the Nicaraguan Rubén Darío, modernism appears in Latin American literature. Preciosity of manner and a strong influence from Symbolism sum up the new genre, which inspires the clearest voice in poetry, Leopoldo Lugones, who was the author of the first Argentine science fiction story. The first truly modern generation in Argentine literature is the Martinfierristas (c. 1922). The movement contributes an intellectual doctrine in which a number of current trends come together: the trend represented by the Florida group, adscript to ultraísmo, with Oliverio Girondo, Jorge Luis Borges, Leopoldo Marechal and Macedonio Fernández; and the trend of Boedo, impressed by Russian realism, with Raúl González Tuñón, César Tiempo y Elías Catelnuovo. Ricardo Güiraldes, however, remains classical in style, giving a whole new freshness to gauchesca poetry and writing what is perhaps the novel, Don Segundo Sombra.

Benito Lynch (1885–1951), an eccentric short-story writer who, like Güiraldes, does not easily fit into any "generation", wrote his quirky tales in an enchanted neo-gauchoesque manner about this time. Between the end of this decade and the beginning of the following one emerged the Novísimos ("Newest"), a generation of poets (Arturo Cambours Ocampo, Carlos Carlino and José Portogalo), fiction writers (Arturo Cerretani, Roberto Arlt, Luis Maria Albamonte and Luis Horacio Velázquez) and playwrights (Roberto Valenti, Juan Oscar Ponferrada and Javier Villafañe). The group promoted philosophical reflection and a new essence for Argentinidad. Leopoldo Marechal's novel Adán Buenosayres, published in 1948 and praised by Julio Cortázar in 1949.

Also worthy of note is the literary work of Leonardo Castellani (1899–1981), a Jesuit priest who left a considerable bulk of essays, novels, tales and poetry. Expelled from the Company of Jesus, the outspoken Castellani was also widely ignored – like his contemporary Marechal – by the literary intelligentsia of his time due to his nationalist ideology.

Generation of '37 edit

The Generation of 1937 centers on poetry, where it developed the descriptive, nostalgic and meditative in the work of Ricardo E. Molinari, Vicente Barbieri, Olga Orozco, León Benarós and Alfonso Sola Gonzáles. Fiction writers subscribed to idealism and magic realism, María Granata, Adolfo Bioy Casares, Julio Cortázar, Silvina Ocampo) or to a subtler form of realism Manuel Mujica Laínez, Ernesto L. Castro, Ernesto Sabato and Abelardo Arias) with some urban touches, as well as folk literature (Joaquín Gómez Bas and Roger Plá).

Essayists do not abound. Antonio Pagés Larraya, Emilio Carilla, Luis Soler Cañas are some of the few who stand out, although the greatest Argentine essayist after Sarmiento – Ezequiel Martínez Estrada – also belonged to the Generation of '37. Many of these writers and a number of European ones contributed extensively to Sur, a literary journal published by Victoria Ocampo, a noted commentator on the day's culture.

Neohumanism, Existentialism and other influences edit

 
Julio Cortázar in 1967, photograph by Sara Facio.

In 1950, another milestone arose: the New Humanism, a response to World War II and its aftermath. On one level are avant-gardists like Raúl Gustavo Aguirre, Edgar Bayley and Julio Llinás; on another, existentialists: José Isaacson, Julio Arístides and Miguel Ángel Viola. Further away are those who reconcile both tendencies with a regionalist tendency: Alfredo Veiravé, Jaime Dávalos and Alejandro Nicotra. Other fiction writers left a highly charged testimony of the times: Beatriz Guido, David Viñas, Marco Denevi and Silvina Bullrich. In a majority of the writers, a strong influence of Anglo-Saxon and Italian poetry can be perceived. Of particular interest are the poetic works of two of Marechal's disciples, the poets Rafael Squirru and Fernando Demaría.

A new trend started in 1960, continuing until about 1990. Its influences are heterogeneous: Sartre, Camus, Eluard; some Spanish writers, like Camilo José Cela; and previous Argentine writers like Borges, Arlt, Cortázar and Marechal. Two trends were in evidence: the tracing of metaphysical time and historicity (Horacio Salas, Alejandra Pizarnik, Ramón Plaza) and the examination of urban and social disarray: (Abelardo Castillo, Marta Lynch, Manuel Puig, Alicia Steinberg).

Dirty War edit

The 1970s were a dark period for intellectual creation in Argentina. The epoch is characterised by the exile (Juan Gelman, Antonio Di Benedetto) or death (Roberto Santoro, Haroldo Conti, and Rodolfo Walsh) of major writers. The remaining literary journalists, like Liliana Heker, veiled their opinions in their work. Some journalists (Rodolfo Walsh), poets (Agustín Tavitián and Antonio Aliberti), fiction writers (Osvaldo Soriano, Fernando Sorrentino), and essayists (Ricardo Herrera, María Rosa Lojo) stood out among the vicissitudes and renewed the field of ethical and aesthetic ideas.

Current edit

The 1990s are marked by reunion among survivors of different generations, in an intellectual coalition for the review of values and texts as Argentina faced the end of the century. Some examples are Alan Pauls, Mario Areca, Aníbal Cristobo, Ernesto de Sanctis, Marco Denevi, Edgar Brau and some more.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ María Minellono. "Entre el folletín y la novela histórica; el problema del género en Amalia de José Mármol"
  2. ^ Eduardo Romano. El nativismo como ideología en "Santos Vega" de Rafael Obligado: Editorial Biblos
  3. ^ Wikipedia article (in Spanish)
  4. ^ Enrique Anderson Imbert. Prólogo a Fausto. Buenos Aires: Editorial de Belgrano
  5. ^ Enrique Anderson Imbert. Análisis de Fausto. Buenos Aires: CEAL, 1968

References edit

  • Prieto, Martín (2006). Breve historia de la literatura argentina (in Spanish). Taurus. ISBN 978-9870403371.

Further reading edit

  • (in Spanish) Arce, Emilia Isabel. "La institucionalización del rol materno durante gobiernos autoritarios: respuestas de escritoras argentinas y brasileñas a la construcción patriarcal de género y nación." () (PhD thesis). University of Texas at Austin, May 2009. (English abstract included)

External links edit

  • Historia de la Literatura Argentina (in Spanish)
  • Literatura Argentina (in Spanish)
  • Generaciön del 37 (in Spanish)
  • Scanner cultural
  • (in Spanish)
  • (in Spanish)
  • (in English)

argentine, literature, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2007. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Argentine literature news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Argentine literature i e the set of literary works produced by writers who originated from Argentina is one of the most prolific relevant and influential in the whole Spanish speaking world with renowned writers such as Jorge Luis Borges Julio Cortazar Leopoldo Lugones and Ernesto Sabato Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Cultural independence from Spain 1 3 Literatura Gauchesca 1 4 Generation of 1880 1 5 Modern 1 6 Generation of 37 1 7 Neohumanism Existentialism and other influences 1 8 Dirty War 1 9 Current 2 See also 3 Notes 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory editOrigins edit As a matter of fact the name of the country itself comes from a Latinism which first appeared in a literary source Martin del Barco Centenera s epic poem La Argentina 1602 This composition runs 10 000 verses and describes the landscape as well as the conquest of the territory The word was reintroduced in Argentina manuscrita a prose chronicle by Ruy Diaz de Guzman Argentine literature began around 1550 with the work of Matias Rojas de Oquendo and Pedro Gonzalez de Prado from Santiago del Estero the first important urban settlement in Argentina who wrote prose and poetry They were partly inspired by oral aboriginal poetry in particular according to Carlos Abregu Virreyra by the lules juries diaguitas and tonocotes A symbiosis emerged between the aboriginal and Spanish traditions creating a distinct literature geographically limited well into the 18th century to the Argentine north and central regions with the province of Cordoba as its center due to the foundation of the National University of Cordoba Two names stand out from this period Gaspar Juarez Baviano and Antonia de la Paz y Figueroa also known as Beata Antula Gradually with the economic prosperity of the port the cultural axis moved eastward The letters of the colonial age Viceroyalty neoclassicism baroque and epic grew under the protection of the independentist fervor Vicente Lopez y Planes Pantaleon Rivarola and Esteban de Luca During the 17th century Argentine baroque literature was poor in comparison with that from Europe and some other parts of the New World The only remarkable poet of this period was fray Jose Luis de Tejeda who wrote Coronas liricas and El peregrino de Babilonia Cultural independence from Spain edit Main article 1837 generation nbsp The salon of the 1837 generation As in the rest of the continent strong feelings of emancipation from Spain were present in Argentina Before independence some neoclassical authors such as Juan Cruz Varela produced numerous works related with this revolutionary spirit but still under the paradoxical Spanish domain Argentina s true break with Spanish tradition was manifested in literature through the adoption of French romanticism as a model postulating the return to popular sources and to the medieval This aesthetic and intellectual was brought by Esteban Echeverria who wrote the first local and realistic story El Matadero The slaughterhouse as well as the nativist poem La Cautiva The Captive with the Pampas as its background His barbed wit and opposition to powerful Buenos Aires governor Juan Manuel de Rosas forced him into exile In the middle of the 19th century Jose Marmol published the first Argentine novel Amalia 1851 1852 a historical novel set during the dark year of 1840 which mixed fictional characters Amalia Daniel Bello Eduardo Belgrano with actual historical characters like Juan Manuel de Rosas 1 As Rosas power increased more literary works from the opposition were produced such as Juan Bautista Alberdi s play El Gigante Amapolas a good example of local sainete In the genre of essay Domingo Faustino Sarmiento published his Facundo a particular re vision of Facundo Quiroga s life from a deterministic point of view Sarmiento conveyed aspects of sociology and semiotics in this analysis Echeverria Marmol and Sarmiento are among the group of writers known as Generacion del 37 who are considered the first generation of local intellectuals Poetry lessened in combative spirit and turned towards the anecdotal and sentimental Carlos Guido y Spano and Ricardo Gutierrez the chronicle writers of folk literature Lucio V Mansilla published in 1870 Una excursion a los indios ranqueles a sort of chronicle of a voluntary expedition to sign a peace treaty with the Indians His work enrolled in a realistic aesthetic anticipated Generacion del 80 which would be deeply influenced by modernism Juana Manuela Gorriti was one of the first popular female writers mainly due to her melodramatic narrative works like the novel La hija del mazorquero and the foundation of La alborada a cultural magazine Literatura Gauchesca edit nbsp Cover of Martin Fierro by Jose Hernandez 1894 edition European oriented indeed Euro centric themes and styles would remain the norm in Argentine letters especially from Buenos Aires during this century The romantic poetry as La cautiva or the latter Santos Vega by Rafael Obligado gave a lot of importance to the nature of the pampa 2 sharing some elements with a picturesque imitation gaucho literature purporting to use the language of the gauchos and to reflect their mentality The first current is known as poesia nativista nativist poetry and became a literary tradition The second known as poesia gauchesca developed in parallel as a part of that generation s understanding of national identity Although it also is a product of literary authors this writing takes the voice of the gaucho as protagonist from the beginning Gauchesca is related to payador s singing a payador being a modern equivalent of the illiterate medieval singers A payador s work in opposition to gauchesca is sung spontaneously 3 The first gauchesco author was Bartolome Hidalgo who wrote during the war of independence and therefore his works had a strong political ideology His compositions were mainly cielitos payadoresque songs but with provocative political messages and dialogos patrioticos conversations between two characters about current affairs In a second period gauchesca was influenced by political faction fights Estanislao del Campo and Hilario Ascasubi are the most representative writers of this period Del Campo wrote Fausto a poem which has been read both as a parody of gauchesca and an intelligent joke towards city people 4 In the poem Anastasio El Pollo meets a friend and tells him his impressions on particular event he has seen the Devil What El Pollo doesn t know or pretends he doesn t is that all he saw was actually an opera performance at Teatro Colon 5 The last author of gauchesca is Jose Hernandez the author of Martin Fierro Gauchesca leaves its political influences and becomes social in the sense that gauchos are disappearing mainly due to Sarmiento and the new economic model Hernandez is considered the responsible for consolidating the gauchesco style Generation of 1880 edit The generation of 1880 emphasized the European color and cultural supremacy of Buenos Aires The migratory current of mixed ethnicity accentuated the change of the big village for the cosmopolitan metropolis The poetry of this period is lyric Leopoldo Diaz y Almafuerte The latter usually depicts the worker s life in passionate attacks against the contradictions of contemporary society Almafuerte pseudonym of Pedro Bonifacio Palacios was also a teacher and a journalist whose opinions and articles gave him a lot of problems Essay is a recent genre that developed in the late 19th century Jose Manuel Estrada Pedro Goyena and Joaquin V Gonzalez Narrative works oscillated between social issues and folk literature The predominant tendency was Realism best represented by Miguel Cane in his autobiographical novel Juvenilia Other writers influenced by realism were Lucio V Mansilla Francisco Sicardi Benito Lynch and Carlos Maria Ocantos Naturalism was also an important tendency towards the end of the century Argentine Naturalism was commanded by Eugenio Cambaceres in his novels Sin rumbo and Musica sentimental almost forgotten today Cambaceres was inspired by Emile Zola s theory about the naturalistic approach to literary work but its ideology suffered considerable alterations Julian Martel and Antonio Argerich with Inocentes o culpables added a highly loaded moral touch to Argentine naturalism Modern edit nbsp Adolfo Bioy Casares Victoria Ocampo and Jorge Luis Borges in Mar del Plata 1935 Towards the end of the 19th century led by the Nicaraguan Ruben Dario modernism appears in Latin American literature Preciosity of manner and a strong influence from Symbolism sum up the new genre which inspires the clearest voice in poetry Leopoldo Lugones who was the author of the first Argentine science fiction story The first truly modern generation in Argentine literature is the Martinfierristas c 1922 The movement contributes an intellectual doctrine in which a number of current trends come together the trend represented by the Florida group adscript to ultraismo with Oliverio Girondo Jorge Luis Borges Leopoldo Marechal and Macedonio Fernandez and the trend of Boedo impressed by Russian realism with Raul Gonzalez Tunon Cesar Tiempo y Elias Catelnuovo Ricardo Guiraldes however remains classical in style giving a whole new freshness to gauchesca poetry and writing what is perhaps the novel Don Segundo Sombra Benito Lynch 1885 1951 an eccentric short story writer who like Guiraldes does not easily fit into any generation wrote his quirky tales in an enchanted neo gauchoesque manner about this time Between the end of this decade and the beginning of the following one emerged the Novisimos Newest a generation of poets Arturo Cambours Ocampo Carlos Carlino and Jose Portogalo fiction writers Arturo Cerretani Roberto Arlt Luis Maria Albamonte and Luis Horacio Velazquez and playwrights Roberto Valenti Juan Oscar Ponferrada and Javier Villafane The group promoted philosophical reflection and a new essence for Argentinidad Leopoldo Marechal s novel Adan Buenosayres published in 1948 and praised by Julio Cortazar in 1949 Also worthy of note is the literary work of Leonardo Castellani 1899 1981 a Jesuit priest who left a considerable bulk of essays novels tales and poetry Expelled from the Company of Jesus the outspoken Castellani was also widely ignored like his contemporary Marechal by the literary intelligentsia of his time due to his nationalist ideology Generation of 37 edit The Generation of 1937 centers on poetry where it developed the descriptive nostalgic and meditative in the work of Ricardo E Molinari Vicente Barbieri Olga Orozco Leon Benaros and Alfonso Sola Gonzales Fiction writers subscribed to idealism and magic realism Maria Granata Adolfo Bioy Casares Julio Cortazar Silvina Ocampo or to a subtler form of realism Manuel Mujica Lainez Ernesto L Castro Ernesto Sabato and Abelardo Arias with some urban touches as well as folk literature Joaquin Gomez Bas and Roger Pla Essayists do not abound Antonio Pages Larraya Emilio Carilla Luis Soler Canas are some of the few who stand out although the greatest Argentine essayist after Sarmiento Ezequiel Martinez Estrada also belonged to the Generation of 37 Many of these writers and a number of European ones contributed extensively to Sur a literary journal published by Victoria Ocampo a noted commentator on the day s culture Neohumanism Existentialism and other influences edit nbsp Julio Cortazar in 1967 photograph by Sara Facio In 1950 another milestone arose the New Humanism a response to World War II and its aftermath On one level are avant gardists like Raul Gustavo Aguirre Edgar Bayley and Julio Llinas on another existentialists Jose Isaacson Julio Aristides and Miguel Angel Viola Further away are those who reconcile both tendencies with a regionalist tendency Alfredo Veirave Jaime Davalos and Alejandro Nicotra Other fiction writers left a highly charged testimony of the times Beatriz Guido David Vinas Marco Denevi and Silvina Bullrich In a majority of the writers a strong influence of Anglo Saxon and Italian poetry can be perceived Of particular interest are the poetic works of two of Marechal s disciples the poets Rafael Squirru and Fernando Demaria A new trend started in 1960 continuing until about 1990 Its influences are heterogeneous Sartre Camus Eluard some Spanish writers like Camilo Jose Cela and previous Argentine writers like Borges Arlt Cortazar and Marechal Two trends were in evidence the tracing of metaphysical time and historicity Horacio Salas Alejandra Pizarnik Ramon Plaza and the examination of urban and social disarray Abelardo Castillo Marta Lynch Manuel Puig Alicia Steinberg Dirty War edit The 1970s were a dark period for intellectual creation in Argentina The epoch is characterised by the exile Juan Gelman Antonio Di Benedetto or death Roberto Santoro Haroldo Conti and Rodolfo Walsh of major writers The remaining literary journalists like Liliana Heker veiled their opinions in their work Some journalists Rodolfo Walsh poets Agustin Tavitian and Antonio Aliberti fiction writers Osvaldo Soriano Fernando Sorrentino and essayists Ricardo Herrera Maria Rosa Lojo stood out among the vicissitudes and renewed the field of ethical and aesthetic ideas Current edit The 1990s are marked by reunion among survivors of different generations in an intellectual coalition for the review of values and texts as Argentina faced the end of the century Some examples are Alan Pauls Mario Areca Anibal Cristobo Ernesto de Sanctis Marco Denevi Edgar Brau and some more See also editLatin American Boom Latin American literature Latin American poetry Cultural movementNotes edit Maria Minellono Entre el folletin y la novela historica el problema del genero en Amalia de Jose Marmol Eduardo Romano El nativismo como ideologia en Santos Vega de Rafael Obligado Editorial Biblos Wikipedia article in Spanish Enrique Anderson Imbert Prologo a Fausto Buenos Aires Editorial de Belgrano Enrique Anderson Imbert Analisis de Fausto Buenos Aires CEAL 1968References editPrieto Martin 2006 Breve historia de la literatura argentina in Spanish Taurus ISBN 978 9870403371 Further reading edit in Spanish Arce Emilia Isabel La institucionalizacion del rol materno durante gobiernos autoritarios respuestas de escritoras argentinas y brasilenas a la construccion patriarcal de genero y nacion Archive PhD thesis University of Texas at Austin May 2009 English abstract included External links editHistoria de la Literatura Argentina in Spanish Literatura Argentina in Spanish Generacion del 37 in Spanish Biblioteca basica de literatura argentina Scanner cultural La inmigracion en la Literatura Argentina in Spanish Origenes de la Literatura Argentina in Spanish Dossier Juan L Ortiz Argentine Literature in Argentina ar in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Argentine literature amp oldid 1153353662, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.