Table of contents for Literary cultures of Latin America : a comparative history / edited by Mario J. Valdâes and Djelal Kadir.


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LITERARY CULTURES OF LATIN AMERICA
Edited by Mario J. Valdes and Djelal Kadir
 TABLE OF CONTENTS
VOLUME ONE
CONFIGURATIONS OF LITERARY CULTURE
Series Overview: Literary History-Comparatively
Linda Hutcheon and Mario J. Valdes
Preface
Mario J. Valdes, Djelal Kadir
Introduction
Luisa Campuzano
PART ONE. PARAMETERS OF LITERARY CULTURE
Introduction: Parameters of Literary Culture
Mario J. Valdes
I. Geographic Factors and the Formation of Cultural Terrain for Literary Production
1. The Formation of a Cultural Territory
Hervé Théry
2. From the New Spain of Cortés to the Mexican, Central American, and Caribbean Mosaic Alain Musset
3. The Andean Countries
Jean-Paul Deler
4. Brazil: A Continent, An Archipelago
Hervé Théry
5. The Southern Cone
Sébastian Velut
6. The Amazon: The Forgotten Heart
Emmanuel Lézy
II. Demographics and the Formation of Cultural Centers
7. Demography, Language, and Cultural Centers
Nicolás Sánchez Albornoz
III. Linguistic Diversity of Latin American Literary Cultures
8. Linguistic Diversity in Mexico
Beatriz Garza Cuarón
9. [Document: Tzotzil Text]
Juan González Hernández
10. [Document: Zapotec Text]
Santiago Fábian L.
11. Linguistic Diversity in Venezuela
Marie-Claude Mattéi Muller
12. Linguistic Diversity in Colombia
Jon Landaburu
13. Linguistic Diversity in the Andean Countries (Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Peru) and Paraguay
Willem F. H. Adelaar
14. The Portuguese Language in Brazil
Marianne Akerberg
IV. History of the Production of Literary Cultures in Colonial Latin America
18. The Production of Literary Culture in New Spain
José Joaquin Blanco
19. The Context of Literary Culture in the Caribbean
Jorge Luis Camacho
20. The Foundations of Brazilian Literary Culture
Tania Franco Carvalhal
21. Literary Culture during the Peruvian Viceroyalty
Luis Millones
V. Access and Participation in the Literary Cultures of Latin America
22. Social History of the Latin American Writer
Mario J. Valdés
23. Reading as a Historical Practice in Latin America: The First Colonial Period to the Nineteenth Century
Juan Poblete
24. Literary Nationalism in Latin America
Leyla Perrone-Moisés
PART TWO. FROM THE MARGINS OF LITERARY HISTORY
Introduction
Cynthia Steele, Heloisa Buarque de Hollanda, Marlyse Meyer, and Beatriz Resende
I. Configurations of Socioeconomic, Racial, and Ethnic Alterity in Literary History
26. Poverty in the History of Literary Cultures
Kathleen Newman
27. First Nations, First Writers: Indigenous Mexican Literary History
Cynthia Steele
28. Recent Mayan Incursions into Guatemalan Literary Historiography
Gail Ament
29. Andean Indigenous Expression: Resisting Marginality
Regina Harrison
30. Brazil's Indigenous Textualities
Claudia Neiva de Matos
31. Afro-Hispanic Writers in Latin American Literary History
Rosemary Geisdorfer Feal
32. Black Presence in Brazilian Literature: From the Colonial Period to the Twentieth Century
Heloisa Toller Gomes, Gizelda Melo do Nascimento and Leda Maria Martins
33. Jewish Literary Culture in Spanish America
Saúl Sosnowski
34. Displacement and Disregard: Brazilian-Jewish Writing and the Search for Narrative Identity
Nelson H. Vieira
II. Gender and Sexual Orientation in the Historical Formation of the Cultural 
Imaginary
37. Women Writers during the Viceroyalty
Josefina Muriel
38. Saints or Sinners?: Life Writings and Colonial Latin American Women
Kathleen Ann Myers
39. Mystics and Visionaries: Women's Writing in Eighteenth-Century Portuguese America
Leila Mezan Algranti
40. Exclusions in Latin American Literary History
Debra A. Castillo
41. Women Writing in Nontraditional Genres
María Elena de Valdés
42. Brazilian Women: Literature from the Nineteenth to the Twentieth Centuries
Lucia Helena, Sylvia Oroz, Sylvia Paixao
43. Constructing the Place of Woman in Brazil's Northeastern Region
Luzilá Gonçalves Ferreira
44. Writing against the Grain: An Overview of Twentieth-Century Lesbian Literature in Latin America
Elena M. Martínez
45. Secrets and Truths
Daniel Balderston
46. Notes toward a History of Homotextuality in Brazilian Literature
Denilson Lopes
PART THREE. PLURALITY OF DISCOURSE IN LATIN AMERICAN CULTURE
I. Political, Scientific, and Religious Discourses
Introduction: Political, Scientific, and Religious Discourses
Eneida Maria de Souza and Raúl Antelo
50. The Rhetoric of Latin American Nationalism from the Colonial Period to Independence
Silvia Delfino
51. The Rhetoric of Citizenship in Modernity
Adriana Rodríguez Pérsico
52. The Struggle Over the Printed Word: The Catholic Church in Brazil and Social Discourse
Aparecida Paiva
53. Scientific Discourse in Brazil and Intellectual Exchange
Rachel Esteves Lima
54. Bio-Policies Undergoing Transformation: Bodies and Ideas of American Identity
Claudia Gilman
II. Orality and Literature
Introduction: Eugenia Meyer
56. The History of Oral Literature in Mexico
Leonardo Manrique Castañeda
57. African Orality in the Literary Culture of the Caribbean
Luz María Martínez Montiel
58. Orality and Literature in the Peruvian Andean Zone
José Antonio Giménez Micó
59. Argentina, Chile, Uruguay: A History of Literary Orality
Eva Grosser Lerner and Eduardo Lucio Molina y Vedia
60. Oral Literature in Brazil
Jerusa Pires Ferreira
61. Textuality and Territoriality in Brazilian Oral Discourse
Ivete Lara Camargos Walty
III. The Multiplicity and Diversity of Discourses and Theatricalities
Introduction: Juan Villegas
62. The Theater in Prehispanic America
Juan Villegas
63. Contemporary Mayan Theater
Tamara Underiner
64. Plurality and Diversity of Theater Discourse
Juan Villegas
65. Afro-Latin American Theater
Juan Villegas
66. Theatrical Forms and Their Social Dimensions in Nineteenth-Century Brazil
Joao Roberto Faria
67. Dramaturgies and Theatricalities: Aspects of the Twentieth-Century Brazilian Literary Scene
Maria Helena Werneck, Victor Hugo Adler Pereira
IV. Transformations in Popular Culture
Introduction: Mario J. Valdés
68. Laughing through One's Tears: Popular Culture in Mexico
Carlos Monsiváis
69. Mass Culture and Literature in Latin America
Ana María Amar Sánchez
70. Literatura de cordel: Literature for Market and Voice
Idelette Muzart Fonseca dos Santos
71. Religious Celebrations in Brazilian Cultural History
Marlyse Meyer
72. Carnival
Félix Coluccio and Marta Isabel Coluccio
73. Popular Memory and the Collective Imagination in Latin American Soap Operas
Jesús Martín-Barbero
74. The Popular in the Confused Republics?
Carlos Monsiváis
V. Cinema: Cultural Dialogues and the Process of Modernity
76. Cultural Dialogues and the Process of Modernity
Julianne Burton-Carvajal and Zuzana M. Pick
LITERARY CULTURES OF LATIN AMERICA
Edited by Mario J. Valdés and Djelal Kadir
VOLUME TWO
INSTITUTIONAL MODES AND CULTURAL MODALITIES
VI. Introduction
Walter D. Mignolo
VII. PART ONE. CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS
VIII. 
IX. Introduction
Lisa Block de Behar and Tania Franco Carvalhal
I. Books and Readers in Latin America
1. Books, Myths, and the Reading Public in Spanish America during the Sixteenth Century
Luigi Avonto
2. The Book in Brazil: Libraries and Presses
José Mindlin
3. [Document: Oswald: Free Book]
Augusto de Campos
II. Cultural Institutions
8. Cultural Institutions in Spanish America
K. Alfons Knauth
9. Cultural Institutions and Intellectual Life in Brazil
Luiz Roberto Cairo
10. Cultural Models of Seventeenth-Century Luso-Brazil Practices of Representation
Joao Adolfo Hansen
11. Latin American Museums: Text, Discourse, and Meaning
Maria de Lourdes Parreiras-Horta
12. Education in Brazil: Omissions, Advances, and Future Perspectives
Célio da Cunha
13. Brazilian Literature in the 1970s: Censorship and the Culture Industry
Cintia Schwantes and Rildo Cosson
14. State Sponsorship and Control of Publishing in Brazil
Fábio Lucas
III. Cultural Journalism
16. Cultural Journalism in Spanish America: An Overview
Anibal González-Pérez
17. Criticism and Literature in Brazilian Periodicals of the Romantic Period
Luiz Roberto Cairo
18. From Journalism to Foundational Text: Os Sertoes (Rebellion in the Backlands)
Jorge Coli
19. Literary Journalism in Brazil during the First Half of the Twentieth Century
Ivia Alves
20. Criticism and Cultural Journalism in Contemporary Brazil
Maria Lucia de Barrios Camargo
IV. Translation as Cultural Institution
23. Translation as a Literary Institution
Laszlo Scholz
24. The Development of a Translation Paideuma and Poetics in Brazil: The Campos Brothers
Else Ribeiro Pires Vieira
PART TWO. TEXTUAL MODELS AND THEIR TRANSFORMATIONS
X. Introduction
Randolph Pope and Flora Sussekind
XI. Form and Figuration
27. The Book and the Format of the Novel
Jussara Menezes Quadros
28. The Representation of Nature in Nineteenth-Century Narrative and Iconography
Luz Aurora Pimentel
XII. Poetic Models and the Cultural Imaginary
29. Poetic Exchange and Epic Landscapes
Gwen Kirkpatrick
30. An Emerging Poetry
Noe Jitrik
XIII. Forms of Discourse in Testimonio, Autobiography and Letter Writing
31. In the Web of Reality: Latin American Testimonio
Elzbieta Sklodowska
32. [Document: From the Spoken to the Written Word]
Elena Poniatowska
33. The Epistolary Genre and Brazilian Modernism
Julio Castañón Guimaraes
XIV. The Essay and its Corollaries
35. The Comparative Drive in the Latin American Essay
Randolph Pope
36. Satire and Temporal Heterogeneity
Flora Sussekind
37. The Sermon in the Seventeenth Century
Alcir Pécora
XV. V. The Novel
39. The Feuilleton and European Models in the Making of the Brazilian Novel
Marlyse Meyer
40. Novel and Journalism: Strategic Interchanges
Anibal González Pérez
41. The Making of the Latin American Novel
Roberto González Echevarria
PART THREE. The Cultural Centers of Latin America
XVI. Introduction
Eduardo de Faria Coutinho and Victoria Peralta
Northern Mexico and the Border
42. Threshold without Frontier: Cultural Limits and Cultural Intervals on the Mexico-U.S. Border
José Manuel Valenzuela
Mesoamerica
43. Enlightened Neighborhood: Mexico City as a Cultural Center
Carlos Monsivais
44. The Cultural Centers of Central America
Nicasio Urbina and Laura Barbas Rhoden
The Caribbean
Introduction
Marcelino Canino Salgado
45. Havana
Luisa Campuzano
46. Santo Domingo: Center of Innovation, Transition, and Change
William Luis
47. Puerto Rico: Caribbean Cultural Center
Marcelino Canino Salgado
48. Caracas
Alexis Márquez Rodríguez
XVII. IV. Andean Region
XVIII. Introduction
Consuelo Triviño Anzola
49. Lima: A Blurred Centrality
Sara Castro-Klaren
50. Bogota: From Colonial Hamlet to Cosmopolitan Metropolis
Victoria Peralta
51. Convent in the Clouds: Quito as a Cultural Center
Regina Harrison
52. La Paz-Chukiyawu Marka
Elizabeth Monasterios
XIX. V. Amazonia
Introduction
Nicomedes Suárez Araúz
53. Belém: Cultural Center
Benedito Nunes
54. [Document: The View from Manaus]
Milton Hatoum
55. Amazonian Cultural Centers of Bolivia
Nicomedes Suárez Araúz
VI. East and Central Brazil
Introduction
Angela Maria Dias
56. Recife as a Cultural Center
César Leal
57. Bahia: Colonization and Cultures
Eneida Leal Cunha, Jeferson Bacelar and Lizir Arcanjo Alves
58. Rio de Janeiro: Capital City
Renato Cordeiro Gomes, Margarida de Souza Neves and Monica Pimenta Velloso
59. Sao Paulo: The Cultural Laboratory and Its Close
Nicolau Sevcenko
60. Ouro Preto, Belo Horizonte, Brasília: The Utopia of Modernity
Maria Zilda Ferreira Cury
XX. VII. The Pampas, The Southern Borderlands
XXI. Introduction
Mário J. Valdés
61. Asunción as a Cultural Center
Olga Araujo-Mendieta
62. Porto Alegre: Cultural Center of Southern Brazil
Rita Terzinha Schmidt
XXII. VIII. Rio de la Plata and Chile
Introduction
Richard Walter
63. Montevideo: From Frontier City to Mercosur
Hugo Achugar
64. Buenos Aires: Cultural Center of River Plate
Noemi Ulla
65. Santiago
Marcella Orellana
XXIII. IX. Latin American Culture in New York and Paris
66. New York City: Center and Transit Point for Hispanic Cultural Nomadism
Dionisio Cañas
67. Paris and Latin Americans, Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: From Cultural Metropolis to Cultural 
Museum?
Denis Rolland
LITERARY CULTURES OF LATIN AMERICA
Edited by Mario J. Valdés and Djelal Kadir
VOLUME THREE
LATIN AMERICAN LITERARY CULTURE: SUBJECT TO HISTORY
XXIV. Introduction
XXV. Wander Melo Miranda
PART ONE. FISSURED FOUNDATIONS: NOSTALGIA AND NEW BEGINNINGS
XXVI. Introduction
Doris Sommer and Maria Consuelo Cunha Campos
I. Epic Voices: Encounters and Foundations
1.	Epic Voices: Nonencounters and Foundation Myths 
José Antonio Mazzotti
2.	Fragment and Totality: Narrating Colonial Encounters
Guillermo Giucci and Marcelo Rocha Wanderley
II. The Discourse of Melancholy: A Culture of Loss
3. Spectacular Cityscapes of Baroque Spanish America
Stephanie Merrim
4. The Discourse of Melancholy in a Culture of Loss
Maria Consuelo Cunha Campos
III. Narratives of Legitimation: The Discourse of Hegemony and the Hermeneutics of Globalization
6. Narratives of Legitimation: The Invention of History-Monument and the National-State
Beatriz González Stephan
7. Creating the National Imaginary
Vera Follain de Figueiredo
IV. Discourses of Modernity
8. National Installments: The Erotics of Modernity in Spanish America
Doris Sommer
9. In the Public Eye: Naturalism and Brazilian Letters
Victor Hugo Adler Pereira
PART TWO. INTERNAL BORDERS: CULTURAL CONFLICTS AND STATE DISCOURSE
Introduction
Alberto Moreiras
XXVII. I. Lettered Mediations
10. Documents of the First Encounter of Europeans with the New World: Lexicons, Missions, Voyages, and 
Resistances 
Ettore Finazzi-Agrò
11. Indigenous, Mestizo and Imperial Reason
Marco Luis Dorfsman and Lori Hopkins
12. "A Very Subtle Idolatry": Estanislao de Vega Bazán's Authentic Testimony of Colonial Andean Religion
Kenneth Mills
13. The Three Faces of the Baroque in Mexico and the Caribbean
Iris Zavala
14. The Baroque and Transculturation
Mabel Moraña
15. The Baroque Gaze
Raúl Antelo
16. Francisco Xavier Clavijero and the Enlightenment in Mexico
José Emilio Pacheco
17. New Thinking: From the Enlightenment to Independence
Susana Rotker
18. Literary Criolism and Indigenism
Horacio Legras
XXVIII. II. Peoples, Communities, and Nation Building
19. Projects of Latin American Emancipation: The Caribbean, 1800-1850
Sibylle Fischer
20. Transculturation and the Discourse of Liberation
Graciela Montaldo
21. Transculturation and Nationhood
Idelber Avelar
22. The Brazilian Construction of Nationalism
Adriana Romeiro
XXIX. III. The Inversion of Social Darwinism
23. Negrismo: The American Real
Elzbieta Sklodowska
24. The Literary Culture of the "New Order": Mexico 1867-1910
Leopoldo Zea
25. The Transcultural Mirror of Science: Race and Self-representation in Latin America
Gabriela Nouzeilles
26. Literary Education and the Making of State Knowledge
Juan Poblete
27. Mestizaje and the Inversion of Social Darwinisn in Spanish American Fiction
Julie Taylor and George Yúdice
XXX. IV. Modernization and the Formation of Cultural Identities
28. Mexico-U.S. Border Transculturation and State Discourse: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Marcus Embry
29. A Paradigm for Modernity: The Concept of Crisis in Modernismo
Jorge Luis Camacho
30. Textual Transcultural Mediations and the Formation of Regional Identity
Ileana Rodríguez
31. Anatomy of the Latin American "Boom" Novel
Brett Levinson
32. The Modern Imaginary and Transculturation
Eneida Maria de Souza
PART THREE. LIMINALITY AND CENTRALITY OF LITERARY CULTURES IN THE TWENTIETH 
CENTURY
I. Amerindian Literary Cultures
Introduction
Elizabeth Monasterios
33. Literatures of Mesoamerica
Miguel León Portilla
34. The Nature of Indigenous Literatures in the Andes
Denise Y. Arnold and Juan de Dios Yapita
II. Latino Literary Cultures in the United States
Introduction
Juan Villegas
35. Reinventing America: The Chicano Literary Tradition
María Herrera-Sobek
36. Chicano-Latino Theater Today
Claudia Villegas-Silva
37. Puerto Rican Literature in the United States
Carmen Dolores Hernández
38. Construction of New Cultural Identities: Puerto Rican Theater in New York
Grace Dávila-López
39. Colonial Figures in Motion: Translocality, Tropicalism, and Translation in Contemporary Puerto Rican 
Literature in the United States
Arnaldo Cruz Malavé
40. Cuban Theater in the United States
José A. Escarpanter
41. Cuban American Prose: 1975-2000
María Cristina García
PART FOUR. LITERARY CULTURE IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Introduction
Renato Cordeiro Gomes, Djelal Kadir, and Maríla Rothier Cardoso
I. Historic Displacements
42. Historic Displacements in Twentieth-Century Brazilian Literary Culture
Renato Cordeiro Gomes, Ana Lúcia Almeida Gazolla, Ana Maria de Alencar, Antonio Arnoni Prado, Edson Rosa da 
Silva, Eneida Leal Cunha, Everardo Rocha, Joao Cezar de Castro Rocha, Marília Rothier Cardoso, and Nádia 
Battella Gotlib
43. Signs of Identity: Latin American Immigration and Exile
Clara F. Lida and Francisco Zapata
44. Exile in the Spanish American Diaspora in the Twentieth Century
Ivan Almeida and Cristina Parodi
45. Political Exclusion / Literary Inclusion: Argentine and Uruguayan Writers
Saul Sosnowski
46. Writers under (and after) the Chilean Military Dictatorship
Javier Campos
II. Modernity, Modernisms, and Their Avatars
47. Notions of Modernity
Javier Lasarte
48. Aesthetics of Rupture
Eneida Maria de Souza
49. The Postmodern in Brazilian Literary Theory and Criticism
Italo Moriconi
III. Ideologies and Imaginaries
50. Literature and Revolution in Latin America
Hermann Herlinghaus
51. Imagining Narrative Territories
Lucille Kerr
52. Utopic Theories in Brazil
Vera Follain de Figueiredo
53. Conservatism and Modernization in Brazil
Victor Hugo Adler Pereira
54. Post-Utopian Imaginaries
Flavio Carneiro
IV. By Way of Coda: In Anticipation
55. Scenes of the Twenty-first Century: The Routes of the New
Julio Ortega




Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication: Latin American literature History and criticism, Literature and society Latin America