Argentina: The Making of a Country through its Literature

Course Description This course considers fiction as a resourceful toolto study cultural history. Drawing mainly on the close reading of Three novels –Sarmiento´s Facundo, Arlt´s The Seven Madmen, Martínez´s Santa Evitaand short stories by Jorge Luis Borges, Julio Cortázar,Luisa Valenzuela...

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Autor principal: Solá, Marcela
Formato: Learning Object
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Program in Argentine and Latin American Studies (PALAS) - Universidad de Belgrano 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://repositorio.ub.edu.ar/handle/123456789/4913
Aporte de:
id I36-R142-123456789-4913
record_format dspace
institution Universidad de Belgrano
institution_str I-36
repository_str R-142
collection Repositorio Institucional - Universidad de Belgrano (UB)
language Inglés
topic Argentina
literatura
literature
cultural history
historia cultural
spellingShingle Argentina
literatura
literature
cultural history
historia cultural
Solá, Marcela
Argentina: The Making of a Country through its Literature
topic_facet Argentina
literatura
literature
cultural history
historia cultural
description Course Description This course considers fiction as a resourceful toolto study cultural history. Drawing mainly on the close reading of Three novels –Sarmiento´s Facundo, Arlt´s The Seven Madmen, Martínez´s Santa Evitaand short stories by Jorge Luis Borges, Julio Cortázar,Luisa Valenzuela and Marcela Solá, the course will discuss how the notion of civilization, as opposed to barbarism, has guided Nation-Building narratives in the Nineteenth Century and continues to be central in the fictions of the Twentieth century. The impact of immigration policies, the rise and fall of Peronismo, Eva Peron’s role and legacy, the Dirty War and how these texts work to shape social memory are some of the topics we will discuss in class. How Jorge Luis Borges´Story underscore the thin line that separates civilization and barbarism, while Julio Cortazar´s “House Taken over” represents peronism as a nightmare. Elsa Osorio’s novel “My Name is Light” and Luisa Valenzuela’s short stories speak about the violent deeds of the 70s. By the end of the course, the student will get a general picture of the historical and cultural contexts in which these books and short stories were written and an understanding of the close links between history, politics and literature in Argentina. There are no make ups for classes falling on public holidays. UB holds to the view that plagiarism constitutes intellectual theft and is a serious breach of acceptable conduct. Any student caught plagiarizing will immediately be given a “no credit” for all courses taken in the semester.
format Learning Object
author Solá, Marcela
author_facet Solá, Marcela
author_sort Solá, Marcela
title Argentina: The Making of a Country through its Literature
title_short Argentina: The Making of a Country through its Literature
title_full Argentina: The Making of a Country through its Literature
title_fullStr Argentina: The Making of a Country through its Literature
title_full_unstemmed Argentina: The Making of a Country through its Literature
title_sort argentina: the making of a country through its literature
publisher Program in Argentine and Latin American Studies (PALAS) - Universidad de Belgrano
publishDate 2015
url http://repositorio.ub.edu.ar/handle/123456789/4913
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