Available Formats
Central American Literatures as World Literature
By (Author) Professor or Dr. Sophie Esch
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
2nd November 2023
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: general
860.99728
Hardback
280
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
A first-of-its-kind study on Central American literature that illuminates classics and highlights new pathways by exploring texts and writers that go beyond or against the confines of the nation-state. Both within Latin American literary and world literary production, Central American literature is often perceived as a marginal space. This collection seeks to challenge this notion and to position and discuss Central American literature within the recently revived debates on world literature. This groundbreaking volume draws on new scholarship on global, transnational, postcolonial, translational, and sociological perspectives on the regions literature, expanding and challenging these debates by focusing on the heterogenous literatures of Central America and its diasporas. Contributors discuss poems, testimonios, novels, and short stories in relation to center-periphery, cosmopolitan, and Internationalist paradigms. These essays explore the multiple ways in which Central American literature goes beyond or against the confines of the nation-state, especially through the indigenous, Black, and migrant voices.
Sophie Esch is an Associate Professor of Spanish at Rice University, USA, with specialization in Central American, Mexican, and comparative literature. She is author of an award-winning book, Modernity at Gunpoint (2018), and has edited a special dossier on Central American literature for one of the premier journals of her field: Passages: Routes of Migration and Memory in Central American Literature, Revista de Estudios Hispnicos, vol. 54 no. 1.