BookFrontier
Writing Across Cultures by Ángel Rama
Book

Writing Across Cultures

Narrative Transculturation in Latin America

Duke University Press · 2012-05-29

Writing Across Cultures: Narrative Transculturation in Latin America

Buy on Amazon

See Lists Featuring This Book

Disclosure: Some outbound links are affiliate links. If you buy through them, we may earn a commission. It doesn't affect which books we include. Learn more in our disclosure policy.

What You Get

  • Reading lane: Caribbean & Latin American and European.
  • Publisher: Duke University Press.

Categories

What we read

  • Literary Criticism / Caribbean & Latin American

    77%
  • Literary Criticism / European / Spanish & Portuguese

    75%
  • BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Hispanic & Latino

    70%

About This Book

Ángel Rama was one of twentieth-century Latin America's most distinguished men of letters. Writing across Cultures is his comprehensive analysis of the varied sources of Latin American literature. Originally published in 1982, the book links Rama's work on Spanish American modernism with his arguments about the innovative nature of regionalist literature, and it foregrounds his thinking about the close relationship between literary movements, such as modernism or regionalism...

Read full description

Ángel Rama was one of twentieth-century Latin America's most distinguished men of letters. Writing across Cultures is his comprehensive analysis of the varied sources of Latin American literature. Originally published in 1982, the book links Rama's work on Spanish American modernism with his arguments about the innovative nature of regionalist literature, and it foregrounds his thinking about the close relationship between literary movements, such as modernism or regionalism, and global trends in social and economic development. In Writing across Cultures , Rama extends the Cuban anthropologist Fernando Ortiz's theory of transculturation far beyond Cuba, bringing it to bear on regional cultures across Latin America, where new cultural arrangements have been forming among indigenous, African, and European societies for the better part of five centuries. Rama applies this concept to the work of the Peruvian novelist, poet, and anthropologist José María Arguedas, whose writing drew on both Spanish and Quechua, Peru's two major languages and, by extension, cultures. Rama considered Arguedas's novel Los ríos profundos ( Deep Rivers ) to be the most accomplished example of narrative transculturation in Latin America. Writing across Cultures is the second of Rama's books to be translated into English.

Similar Books