‘A Sly, Mid-Atlantic Appropriation’: Ireland, the United States, and Transnational Fictions of Spain
Sinéad Moynihan
This chapter seeks to dislodge Irish America as the dominant referent in discussions of Irish transnationalism and investigate a substantial tradition that positions Spain as an important ...
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The Andean Novel: The (De)construction of a Written Territory
Núria Vilanova
This chapter focuses on the impact of the Andes and its cultures on a genre that more solidly belonged to the written European tradition: the novel. Motivated by a long literary history, ...
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The Arabic Novel and History
Roger Allen
This chapter examines the relationship between the Arabic novel and history within the context of the Arabic-speaking world, and in particular the process of producing a literary history of ...
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Argentina and Hispano-America
Christina E. Civantos
This chapter examines the main trends and themes found across the novels of the Hispano-American mahjar (place of exile and immigrant life), with particular emphasis on Argentina. It ...
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Arrows in Flight: Success and Failure in Mid-Twentieth-Century Irish Fiction
Heather Ingman
This chapter explores why the three twentieth-century writers who arguably did most to establish the short story as the quintessential Irish literary form—Frank O’Connor, Seán O’Faoláin, ...
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The Asian-Latin American Novel
Ignacio López-Calvo
The increasing cultural production by Latin American and the Caribbean authors of Chinese and Japanese ancestry in recent decades reflects the emergence of two diasporic, minority ...
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Atlantic Continuities in Tomás Rivera and Rudolfo Anaya
Sarah M. Quesada
This chapter draws from Tomás Rivera’s poetry and Rudolfo Anaya’s short story “The Man Who Could Fly” (2006) to read continuities of an Atlantic world formation within the Southwest. ...
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The Author
Justin Steinberg
This chapter will examine Dante both as an historical author as well as the ‘author figure’ he performs in his texts, with particular attention to the tension between these two forms of ...
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Beginnings: A World History of Authorship
Alexander Beecroft
Through a wide-angle exposition of the history of authorship that takes us back to Mesopotamia, Ancient Greec,e and Early China as well as medieval Europe, this chapter shows how, for much ...
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Bodies on Fire
Cary Howie
This chapter discusses the complications of the human body as it appears in Dante’s Commedia. The chapter argues for the body’s fiery potential, the way it challenges some of the schemes ...
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Carlos Fuentes’s Narrative Universe
Maarten van Delden
This chapter examines three aspects of Carlos Fuentes’s narrative oeuvre. First, it explores his approach to the relationship between the individual and the community. Fuentes inherited the ...
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Celebrity: On the Different Publics of World Authorship
Rebecca Braun
This chapter shows how the methods and approaches of Celebrity Studies throw fresh light on what authors and literature can do in the world. In particular, the divide between elite and ...
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Censorship: The Challenge of Writing in Oppressive Regimes
Alexandra Harrington
Eastern Europe has been provocatively defined as ‘that part of the world where serious literature and those who produce it have traditionally been overvalued’ (Baruch Wachtel Remaining ...
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The Central American Novel
Nanci Buiza
This chapter traces the development of the novel in Central America from the late nineteenth century to the present. It begins at the moment when romanticism and modernismo are on the wane ...
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