Bültmann & Gerriets
Nossa and Nuestra América
Inter-American Dialogues
von Robert Patrick Newcomb
Verlag: Purdue University Press
Reihe: Purdue Studies in Romance Literatures Nr. 52
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ISBN: 978-1-61249-150-9
Erschienen am 15.10.2011
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 274 Seiten

Preis: 23,49 €

23,49 €
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Gratis-Leseprobe
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Robert Patrick Newcomb teaches Portuguese and Spanish at UC Davis. His articles, generally on comparative Luso-Hispanic topics, have been published in Estudos Avançados,Chasqui, Hispania,and Luso-Brazilian Review, among other journals. He is the translator of Alfredo Bosi¿s Colony, Cult and Culture (UMass Dartmouth, 2008).



Acknowledgments and Note on Translations
Introduction: This Our Disunion
Chapter One: Counterposing Nossa and Nuestra América
Chapter Two: José Enrique Rodó: "Iberoamérica," the Magna Patria, and the Question of Brazil
Chapter Three: Joaquim Nabuco: Monarchy's End and the "South Americanization" of Brazil
Chapter Four: Alfonso Reyes: Culture, Humanism, and Brazil's Place in the American Utopia
Chapter Five: Sérgio Buarque de Holanda: Obscured Roots of Rodó in Raízes do Brasil
Appendix: English Translations
Notes
Works Cited
Index



Is Brazil part of Latin America, or an island unto itself? As Nossa and Nuestra América: Inter-American Dialogues demonstrates, this question has been debated by Brazilian and Spanish American intellectuals alike since the early nineteenth century, though it has received limited scholarly attention and its answer is less obvious than you might think. This book charts Brazil's evolving and often conflicted relationship with the idea of Latin America through a detailed comparative investigation of four crucial Latin American essayists: Uruguayan critic José Enrique Rodó, Brazilian writer-diplomat Joaquim Nabuco, Mexican humanist Alfonso Reyes, and Sérgio Buarque de Holanda, one of Brazil's preeminent historians. While these writers are canonical figures in their respective national literary traditions, their thoughts on Brazilian-Spanish American relations are seldom investigated, and they are rarely approached from a comparative perspective. In Nossa and Nuestra América, Newcomb traces the development of two parallel essayistic traditions: Spanish American continentalist discourse and Brazil's solidly national exegetic tradition. With these essayistic traditions in mind, he argues that Brazil plays a necessary-and necessarily problematic-role in the intellectual construction of "Latin America." Further, in traversing the Luso-Hispanic frontier and bringing four of Latin America's preeminent thinkers into critical dialogue, Newcomb calls for a truly comparative approach to Luso-Brazilian and Spanish American literary and cultural studies. Nossa and Nuestra América will be of interest to scholars and students of Latin American and Luso-Brazilian literature and ideas, and to anyone interested in rethinking comparative approaches to literary texts written in Portuguese and Spanish.