Belonging Beyond Borders

Cosmopolitan Affiliations in Contemporary Spanish American Literature

Table of contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Narrating Transculturation: Elena Poniatowska's La "Flor de Lis"

Cosmopolitanism and Nationalism in the Global Era in the Fictions of Mario Vargas Llosa

Cosmopolitanism in the Age of the End of History in the Fictions of George Volpi

Conclusion
Bibliography
Notes

The first book to trace the evolution of political cosmopolitanism in Latin American literature through a generational lens, presenting a new blended theoretical framework.

Description

Belonging Beyond Borders maps the evolution of cosmopolitanism in Spanish American narrative literature through a generational lens. Drawing on a new theoretical framework that blends intellectual studies and literary history with integrated approaches to Spanish American narrative, this book traces the evolution from aesthetic cosmopolitanism through anti-colonial nationalism to modern political cosmopolitanism.

Cosmopolitanism in Latin America has historically been associated with colonialism. In the mid-twentieth-century, authors who presented cosmopolitan narratives were harshly criticized by their nationalist peers. However, with the intensification of cultural globalization Spanish American authors have redefined cosmopolitanism, rejecting a worldview that relies on the creation of an other for the definition of the self. Instead, this new generation has both embraced and challenged global citizenship, redefining concepts to address human rights, identity, migration, belonging, and more.

Taking the work of Elena Poniatowka, Mario Vargas Llosa, and Jorge Volpi as examples, this book presents innovative scholarship across literary traditions. It shows how Spanish-American authors offer nuanced understandings of national and global affiliations, and identities and untangles the strings of cosmopolitan thought and activism from those of nationalist criticism. /p

Reviews

An important contribution to Latin American literary criticism.

- Maia Fernández Lamarque, Hispania