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Deborah N. Cohn - History and Memory in the Two Souths: Recent Southern and Spanish American Fiction

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It is commonplace among literary critics to refer to William Faulkners influence on Spanish American literature. Yet few studies have delved seriously into why the attraction of the writings of this southerner has been so powerful. In this bold new study, Deborah N. Cohn addresses this question squarely, from two perspectives.First, Cohn proposes that Faulkners appeal derives from Spanish American authors perception of similarities between the Souths history and the experiences of their own respective nations. She delineates historical experiences common to the South and Spanish America, including civil wars, defeat and dispossession, regional marginalization, and socio-economic hardship. She also suggests that Spanish American authors found in Faulkner a set of concerns with which they could identify and that, as a result, they were inspired to take up the stylistic innovations characteristic of his writing. The resulting assimilation and adaptation of Euro-American modernism through Faulkner has been an indispensable part of what is known as la nueva narrativa, the new narrative, as well as of successive movements in Spanish American literature.From another perspective, Cohns book shows points of contact between works by other southern and Spanish American novelists without positing relations of influence. Specifically, after identifying common, recurrent themes in modern southern and Spanish American literature in general, Cohn reveals levels of a shared understanding of regional history in Faulkner and Mario Vargas Llosa, in Ralph Ellison and Isabel Allende, as well as in Katherine Anne Porter and Juan Rulfo. Her analyses compare and contrast these authors shared attempts to provide correctives to official, mainstream historical discourse through alternate, parallel strategies for reconstructing, recording, and reclaiming the past.In yoking together the South and Spanish America as neighboring spaces with similar personalities, Cohn advances a daring and controversial thesis that both narrows and enhances the frame of comparison between the literatures of the South and Spanish America.

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title History and Memory in the Two Souths Recent Southern and Spanish - photo 1

title:History and Memory in the Two Souths : Recent Southern and Spanish American Fiction 1St Ed.
author:Cohn, Deborah N.
publisher:Vanderbilt University Press
isbn10 | asin:0826513328
print isbn13:9780826513328
ebook isbn13:9780585149622
language:English
subjectAmerican fiction--Southern States--History and criticism.--Memory in literature, Historical fiction, American--Southern States--History and criticism.--Novela histrica americana--Historia y crtica--Estados del Sur, Literature and history--Southern Sta
publication date:1999
lcc:PS261.C54 1999eb
ddc:813/.5409975
subject:American fiction--Southern States--History and criticism.--Memory in literature, Historical fiction, American--Southern States--History and criticism.--Novela histrica americana--Historia y crtica--Estados del Sur, Literature and history--Southern Sta
Page iii
History and Memory in the Two Souths
Recent Southern and Spanish American Fiction
Deborah N. Cohn
VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY PRESS
NASHVILLE AND LONDON
Page iv
Copyright 1999 by Vanderbilt University Press
Nashville, Tennessee 37235
All Rights Reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions
First Edition 1999
990001 02 03 54321
This publication is made from paper that meets the minimum requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (R 1997)Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. Picture 2
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Cohn, Deborah N., 1967
History and memory in the two souths : recent Southern and
Spanish American fiction / Deborah N. Cohn.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
Contents: Introduction: the U.S. South and Spanish America: neighboring spaces and the search for meaning in difficult pastsThe case of the fabricated facts: invented information and the problems of reconstructing the past in Absalom, Absalom! and the real life of Alejandro MaytaTo see or not to see: invisibility, clairvoyance, and re-visions of history in Invisible man and The house of the spiritsParadise lost and regained: the old order and memory in the Miranda stories and Pedro PramoConclusion: race and place in indentity and historyNotesWorks citedIndex.
ISBN 0-8265-1332-8 (alk. paper)
ISBN 0-8265-1337-9 (pbk. : alk paper)
1. American fictionSouthern StatesHistory and criticism. 2. Historical fiction, AmericanSouthern StatesHistory and criticism. 3. Literature and historySouthern StatesHistory20th century. 4. Spanish American fiction20th centuryHistory and criticism. 5. Literature and historyLatin AmericaHistory20th century. 6. Historical fiction, Spanish American History and criticism. 7. Literature, ComparativeAmerican and Spanish American. 8. Literature, ComparativeSpanish American and American. 9. Autobiographical memory in literature. 10. Southern StatesIn literature. 11. Latin AmericaIn literature. 12. Memory in literature. I. Title.
PS261 .C54 1999
813'.5409975DC21 98-58119
CIP
Manufactured in the United States of America
Page v
for Tam, Les, and Peter
Page vii
Contents

Acknowledgments
ix
1. The U.S. South and Spanish America
Neighboring Spaces and the Search for Meaning in Difficult Pasts
1
2. The Case of the Fabricated Facts
Invented Information and the Problems of Reconstructing the Past in Absalom, Absalom!and The Real Life of Alejandro Mayta
45
3. To See or Not to See
Invisibility, Clairvoyance, and Re-visions of History in Invisible Man and The House of the Spirits
94
4. Paradise Lost and Regained
The Old Order and Memory in the Miranda Stories and Pedro Pramo
134
5. Race and Place in Identity and History
182
Notes
195
Works Cited
211
Index
231

Page viii
Page ix
Acknowledgments
I offer my heartfelt thanks to the faculty members who have encouraged me over the years: Beth Bauer, Charles Faulhaber, Gwen Kirkpatrick, Geoffrey Ribbans, Arnold Weinstein, and the entire faculty of the Department of Hispanic Studies at Brown University, who generously gave of their time, energy, and encouragement. Most of all, I am eternally indebted to Stephanie Merrim, to whom this book owes its existence.
I am grateful to the friends who have given advice and companionship throughout this project: David Boruchoff, Carrie Chorba, Erika Haber, Patrick McMorrow, Jean O'Bryan, Gus Puleo, Jamie Samons, and Lisa Sherman; to my parents, Irene and Paul Cohn, for taking me to Central America and, more recently, to behold the heights of Macchu Picchu; to Leslie Cohn, for her friendship and surrogate home; to Peter Sauer, for his love, support, and photography skills; and, it goes without saying, to my sister, Tam Cohn.
Many thanks go to the staff of Vanderbilt University Press for their tireless work in turning this project into a book. I am also grateful to Earl Fitz and Michael Kreyling, whose comments on an earlier version of this manuscript greatly helped me to focus my project.
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