Available Formats
Imagining the Plains of Latin America: An Ecocritical Study
By (Author) Dr Axel Prez Trujillo Diniz
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
15th July 2021
20th May 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Literary studies: postcolonial literature
860.932145
Hardback
184
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
440g
From the Pampas lowlands of Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil to the Altiplano plateau that stretches between Chile and Peru, the plains of Latin America have haunted the literature and culture of the continent. Bringing these landscapes into focus as a major subject of Latin American culture, this book outlines innovative new ecocritcial readings of canonical literary texts from the 19th century to the present. Tracing these natural landscapes across national borders the book develops a new transnational understanding of Hispanic culture in South America and expands the scope of the contemporary environmental humanities. Texts covered include works by: Ciro Alegra, Manoel de Barros, Ezequiel Martnez Estrada, Rmulo Gallegos, Jos Eustasio Rivera, Joo Guimares Rosa, and Domingo Sarmiento.
From Sarmiento to Rivera to Gallegos, Axel Prez Trujillo examines Latin Americas most renowned writers through an ecocritical lens to trace, with great specificity, the transnational legacy of settler ecologies from the nineteenth century onward. His patient reading of plains imaginaries homes in on specific biomes to shed light on fascinating and understudied categories like continentalism, tropology, and predation. With an eye toward highlighting the urgency of ecocriticism, Prez Trujillo challenges us to rethink representation and reality, space and subject, and hemispheric notions of what constitutes progress and modernity. * Aarti S. Madan, Associate Professor of Spanish and International Studies, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, USA *
Axel Prez Trujillo Diniz is Assistant Professor of Hispanic Studies, Durham University, UK.