
Graduate Center for
Research and Retention
Have a Question?
Ask the Graduate
College at our new
email address:
GRAD-Info@wmich.edu
Related Topics
Doctoral Dissertation Announcement
Candidate: Claudia L. Márquez Reséndiz
Degree of:
Doctor of Philosophy
Department: Spanish
Title: Mapa provisional de la literatura hispanoamericana de entre siglos: una mirada al camino literario actual
Committee:
Dr. Antonio Isea, Chair
Dr. Benjamín Torres
Dr. Irma López
Dr. Miguel Cabañas
Date: Friday, May 18, 2012 11:00 .m. to 1:00 p.m.
033 Brown
Hall
Abstract:
Globalization has dramatically transformed many aspects of our life. Media and technology have advanced significantly in the last two decades. At the same time, migration has increased at an unprecedented pace. Literature reflects and expresses the social, economic, political and cultural factors that are occurring at any given time. My dissertation focuses on a novelistic production of the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. This body of literature carries within a particular structure of feeling that has emerged in our global era.
In chapter one, I undertake the reading of three novels that discuss and question the concept of “national” literature. The novels that form the chapter are Casi nunca by Daniel Sada, Quien dice sombra by Pedro Angel Palou, and La ciudad ausente by Ricardo Piglia. Chapter two focuses on mass culture in our global times. Villa Diamante by Boris Izaguirre, Muerte de un Murciano en la Habana by Teresa Dovalpage, Paraiso Travel by Jorge Franco, and El cantor de tango by Tomás Eloy Martínez are the novels under study in this chapter. Mass culture is a discursive archive these authors use to experiment, explore and bring attention to marginalized cultural forms. In this cluster of my dissertation, I show how the “minor” genres (science fiction, melodrama and romance novel) have redefined canonical literary structures. Chapter three focuses on some works of two Puerto Rican writers, Pedro Cabiya and Luis López Nieves. Both authors, I argue, produce a narrative that leaves behind the obsession about identity that was the center of the Puerto Rican narrative until recent years. Finally, in chapter four, I analyze 2666 by Roberto Bolaño, perhaps the most important novel of the first decade of twenty-first century. I center my analysis on the way Bolaño’s work probes into the idea of a post national world. Attention in this chapter is also given to the strategies of representation that 2666 employs to shed light on the issue of violence at the turn of the twentieth century.