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December 2011

6 x 9 in.
248 pp., 16 b&w photos

ISBN: 978-0-292-72669-7
$55.00, hardcover with dust jacket
33% website discount: $36.85

 
 

The University of Texas Press's warehouse will be closed for inventory from Friday, 24 February 2012, until Thursday, 1 March 2012. Orders placed after noon Central time on Wednesday, 22 February 2012, will not ship until the inventory is over.

 
 
     

Urban Chroniclers in Modern Latin America
The Shared Intimacy of Everyday Life

By Viviane Mahieux

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

An unstructured genre that blends high aesthetic standards with nonfiction commentary, the journalistic crónica, or chronicle, has played a vital role in Latin American urban life since the nineteenth century. Drawing on extensive archival research, Viviane Mahieux delivers new testimony on how chroniclers engaged with modernity in Mexico City, Buenos Aires, and São Paulo during the 1920s and 1930s, a time when avant-garde movements transformed writers' and readers' conceptions of literature. Urban Chroniclers in Modern Latin America: The Shared Intimacy of Everyday Life examines the work of extraordinary raconteurs Salvador Novo, Cube Bonifant, Roberto Arlt, Alfonsina Storni, and Mário de Andrade, restoring the original newspaper contexts in which their articles first emerged.

Each of these writers guided their readers through a constantly changing cityscape and advised them on matters of cultural taste, using their ties to journalism and their participation in urban practice to share accessible wisdom and establish their role as intellectual arbiters. The intimate ties they developed with their audience fostered a permeable concept of literature that would pave the way for overtly politically engaged chroniclers of the 1960s and 1970s. Providing comparative analysis as well as reflection on the evolution of this important genre, Urban Chroniclers in Modern Latin America is the first systematic study of the Latin American writers who forged a new reading public in the early twentieth century.

Viviane Mahieux is Assistant Professor of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of California, Irvine. She teaches and writes on modern and contemporary Latin American literature, with a particular focus on Mexico. Her edition of the chronicles of Cube Bonifant, Una pequeña marquesa de Sade: crónicas selectas (1921-1948) was published in Mexico in 2009.

Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long Series in Latin American and Latino Art and Culture


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