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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
From Vision To Apocalypse: The Poetic Subject In Recent Mexican Poetry, Norma Klahn
From Vision To Apocalypse: The Poetic Subject In Recent Mexican Poetry, Norma Klahn
Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
Over the last two decades there have been significant changes in the poetic subject. After the colloquial realism of the fifties and sixties, in which the poetic subject acted as witness to his or her time or spoke as a collective subject, there has emerged, particularly in the poetry of José Emilio Pacheco, a poetry in which the subject assumes an impersonal voice. This poetry questions originality, privileging appropriation, parody and pastiche while becoming increasingly skeptical and apocalyptic.
Pastiche In Contemporary Latin American Literature, Jean Franco
Pastiche In Contemporary Latin American Literature, Jean Franco
Studies in 20th & 21st Century Literature
Pastiche, defined as non-satiric imitation, is a characteristic feature of contemporary Latin American narrative. Although unlike parody it does not stand in antagonist relationship with a prior text, nevertheless pastiche marks a distance and a displacement of other texts. The article illustrates this with reference to Mario Vargas Llosa's pastiche of Machiguenga indigenous legends in his novel El hablador and Silviano Santiago's pastiche of Graciliano Ramos's prison memories in his novel, Em Liberdade.