Becoming Pat(ri)agonia: body and homeland in the poetics of Ivonne Coñuecar

A significant reading itinerary opens around a series of writers from southern Chile, whose works ⸺published between 2000 and 2014⸺ interpellate the established imaginary of Nation and the discourses and symbols that reinforce it: flag, anthem, monument. The present work focuses its interest on the...

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Autor principal: Natalini, Aixa Valentina
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Facultad de Filosofía y Humanidades 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/recial/article/view/31226
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Sumario:A significant reading itinerary opens around a series of writers from southern Chile, whose works ⸺published between 2000 and 2014⸺ interpellate the established imaginary of Nation and the discourses and symbols that reinforce it: flag, anthem, monument. The present work focuses its interest on the poetry collection Patriagonia: Catabática, Adiabática, Anabática (Santiago: LOM, 2014) by the Chilean writer Ivonne Coñuecar (1980, Coyhaique; resident of Rosario, Argentina) in order to explore the ways in which the poetic subject gives shape to its own 'nation': her patria-palabra (homeland-word). The poetic word provides anchorage to the voice(s) that speak throughout constant dislocations: of identity, geography, sex, ideology. From the dispossession of the territory to the dispossession of the body, the poetic subject of Patriagonia undermines the narrative of the democratic transition in Chile to construct her truth. She retraces childhood and adolescence from a present of enunciation that allows her to critically deconstruct her native south, Coyhaique, and the nation, with its institutions and symbols.