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First Brazilian Republic

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Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2023) 75 (1): 73–88.
Published: 01 March 2023
... popular in elite circles during the First Brazilian Republic. However, this essay asserts that the references to Java in the story are not arbitrary means through which to carry out that critique. Instead, drawing on Lisa Lowe’s concept of residual intimacies and Bruno Carvalho’s engagement of cartografia...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2014) 66 (2): 149–172.
Published: 01 June 2014
... as the first Brazilian novel to feature a “purely” black protagonist.1 Although Caminha’s Bom Crioulo (1895) emulates much of the style and scientific mentality of nine- teenth-century naturalism, à la Émile Zola, it is not surprising that in the context of post-abolition Rio de Janeiro (not to mention...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2008) 60 (4): 370–388.
Published: 01 September 2008
... readerships to cosmopolitan modernity.2 Some decades later 1 This crisis of purpose facing modernista  writers was first comprehensively analyzed by Angel Rama in Rubén Darío y el modernismo. 2 In The World Republic of Letters, Pascale Casanova...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2022) 74 (1): 99–118.
Published: 01 March 2022
...Jerry White Abstract This article posits that Pier Paolo Pasolini’s long engagement with Catalonia offers important insights into his practice as a poet, filmmaker, and thinker about language, as well as explaining the nature of his influence on other European cinemas. The first part of the article...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2009) 61 (3): 189–208.
Published: 01 June 2009
... ( 2004 ): 1 -9. Larsen, Neil. “Roberto Schwartz: A Quiet (Brazilian) Revolution in Critical Theory.” Determinations: Essays on Theory, Narrative, and Nation in the Americas . London, New York: Verso, 2001 . Law, James D. Here and There in Two Hemispheres . Lancaster: Home Publishing Co., 1903...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2001) 53 (4): 373–388.
Published: 01 September 2001
... American and Latino sources he consults would have completed an important new mapping. 3 Many scholars have dealt with the “invention of America” theme as it relates to Latin America. Edmundo O’Gorman’s book, first published in 1948, remains a point of departure and contention. See also José Rabasa’s...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2017) 69 (3): 271–287.
Published: 01 September 2017
... and resist totalizing geopolitical visions. Through their peculiarly unique forms of worlding, these two novels illuminate the complex relationships between world-building, story-telling, and theories of world literature. 1. The first place one thinks to look for an answer...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2012) 64 (1): 110–112.
Published: 01 March 2012
... . . . nation-states remain a major, perhaps inescapable, container for contemporary politics, ambitions, and transformations” (xvi). If Cooppan is not the first critic to argue against a strain of globalization theory that would seek to fix the nation firmly in the past, she nevertheless makes a compelling...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2012) 64 (1): 112–115.
Published: 01 March 2012
... inescapable, container for contemporary politics, ambitions, and transformations” (xvi). If Cooppan is not the first critic to argue against a strain of globalization theory that would seek to fix the nation firmly in the past, she nevertheless makes a compelling case for the need not only to acknowledge...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2012) 64 (1): 115–117.
Published: 01 March 2012
..., perhaps inescapable, container for contemporary politics, ambitions, and transformations” (xvi). If Cooppan is not the first critic to argue against a strain of globalization theory that would seek to fix the nation firmly in the past, she nevertheless makes a compelling case for the need not only...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2012) 64 (1): 117–119.
Published: 01 March 2012
..., perhaps inescapable, container for contemporary politics, ambitions, and transformations” (xvi). If Cooppan is not the first critic to argue against a strain of globalization theory that would seek to fix the nation firmly in the past, she nevertheless makes a compelling case for the need not only...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2021) 73 (3): 344–359.
Published: 01 September 2021
... and forms available for poetry, and autonomizing it from politics. Modernism, on the other hand, first acquired literary currency in English in the 1920s. It was then essentially a shorthand to dismiss or to defend a diversity of experimental writings— increasingly mired in controversy—over the relation...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2023) 75 (2): 153–171.
Published: 01 June 2023
... for international students supported the Soviet Union’s self-presentation as the world’s “first anticolonial empire” (see Kirasirova ). Educational diplomacy was prioritized both in the Comintern period (1921–43) and later with the 1960s relaunch of Soviet internationalism under General Secretary Nikita Khrushchev...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2009) 61 (3): 256–273.
Published: 01 June 2009
..., pp. 67ff. 12 At the time, I was an Argentine citizen and resident of Mexico, a fourth-generation Latin Ameri- can whose origins are part German and part Italian. “BEING-IN-THE-WORLD-HISPANICALLY ” / 263 I. The “First of Worlds.”13 On the “Mother’s” Side...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2012) 64 (3): 300–315.
Published: 01 September 2012
...Arturo Arias This article explores the emergence of Central American-American discursive and performance poetic art that, written bilingually and occasionally incorporating Portuguese or an indigenous language, has been present in the United States since the mid-1980s, but bloomed in the first...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2023) 75 (1): 52–72.
Published: 01 March 2023
... as limitless Black resonance—that is, with attention to the material, embodied, and acoustic properties of voicing. In the 1970s and 1980s, both authors developed literary strategies for the grotesque figuring of sound on the seemingly silent page. In his first book The House of Hunger (1978) — a collection...
Journal Article
Comparative Literature (2014) 66 (1): 127–147.
Published: 01 March 2014
... initiated by the Cuban poet José Martí. It was first crystallized in the Nicaraguan writer Rubén Darío’s Azul . . . (1888), given its name and sense in an 1890 essay of Darío’s, then faded in the 1910s with the rise of various avant-gardes and the death of Darío in 1916. As the first pan-Spanish...