Childhood and the Nation in Latin American Literature
Allende, Reinaldo Arenas, Bosch, Bryce Echenique, Cortázar, Manuel Galván, Federico Gamboa, S. Ocampo, Peri Rossi, Salarrué
©2001
Monographs
X,
164 Pages
Series:
American University Studies , Volume 27
Summary
This truly interdisciplinary work utilizes literature as a primary resource in examining the concept of childhood and how it is exploited and explored in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Latin America. Little has been published on the history of childhood or children in Latin America. Whether equating the child’s potentiality with that of the nation, or drawing an analogy between parent-child and state-citizen relationships; whether using the child as representative of marginalized sectors of society, or equating the status and role of the author in society with those of the child, in the end such literary treatments of childhood result in a dehumanization of the child performed in the name of constructing a national identity.
Details
- Pages
- X, 164
- Publication Year
- 2001
- ISBN (Hardcover)
- 9780820442594
- Language
- English
- Keywords
- society status role dehumanization national identity
- Published
- New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2001. X, 164 pp.
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