Limit this search to....

Julio Cortazar: A Study in Short Fiction
Contributor(s): Stavans, Ilan (Author)
ISBN: 0805782931     ISBN-13: 9780805782936
Publisher: Twayne Publishers
OUR PRICE:   $61.38  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: February 1996
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: A story, Julio Cortazar claimed, is born in a sparkle, a thunderous strike of inspiration, and requires very little by way of processing. He considered literature the product of a spirit dictating its craft to numerous scribes everywhere on the globe; his unusual methods of writing short stories was not unlike those developed by the French surrealist Andre Breton and the American Beat writer Jack Kerouac. Author of the internationally acclaimed novel Hopscotch (1963), Cortazar was born in Brussels, raised in Buenos Aires, and self-exiled to Europe in 1951. Although very much in vogue in the 1960s and 1970s in Europe, the United States, and Latin America, Cortazar has mysteriously fallen out of public favor since his death in 1984. In this volume Ilan Stavans seeks to redress this neglect, using Cortazar's art to enlighten his life and vice versa. He focuses his analysis on the ways in which, by choosing to rebuff, imitate, or pay homage to Jorge Luis Borges, Edgar Allan Poe, and other writers, Cortazar found his own unique style. Stavans argues that a handful of the hundred or so stories Cortazar wrote are among the best this century has delivered, including "Axolot!" (1956), about a man trapped in the body of a salamander; "House Taken Over" (1946), about the effects of tyranny on individual freedom and domestic life; and "Blow-Up" (1958), about the moral implications that emerge after one witnesses a crime. Stavans begins by studying Cortazar's artistic development as a writer in Buenos Aires from the early 1940s until 1951; he then analyzes what the Argentine wrote in Paris and traces his favorite themes and symbols, paying special attention to his long story "The Pursuer (1958), considered by many to be a transitional work. He also examines Cortazar's ideological commitment during the student uprising in Paris in 1968, his views on the Cuban Revolution and the Sandinistas in Nicaragua, and his so-called ideological stories. The second section of this volume reprints what Stavans considers Cortazar's best explanation of what makes a short story unique and what its uses are - "On the Short Story and Its Environs" - along with two personal essays, "The Present State of Fiction in Latin America" and "Letter to Roberto Fernandez Retamar," which clarify Cortazar's method of writing, his aesthetic approach to the natural and supernatural, and his view on the role artists and intellectuals are called upon to play in Third World. In the third section, an essay by critic John Ditski studies Cortazar's early works, while a piece by Evelyn Picon Garfield, a longtime Cortazar devotee and the author of an insightful book-length interview with him, focuses on Octahedron (1974).
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | European - Spanish & Portuguese
- Literary Criticism | American - African American
- Literary Criticism | Women Authors
Dewey: 863
LCCN: 95032554
Series: Twayne's Studies in Short Fiction
Physical Information: 0.77" H x 5.82" W x 8.74" (0.77 lbs) 188 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Central Europe
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Series Editors: Gary Scharnhorst, University of New Mexico and Eric Haralson, State University of New York, Stony Brook

This is the only series to provide in-depth critical introductions to major modern and contemporary short story writers worldwide. Each volume offers:

  • A comprehensive overview of the artists short fiction-including detailed analyses of every significant story
  • Interviews, essays, memoirs and other biographical materials -- often previously unpublished
  • A representative selection of critical responses
  • Acomprehensive primary bibliography, a selected bibliography of important criticism, a chronology of the artists life and works and an index