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Mexico in Its Novel: A Nation's Search for Identity
Contributor(s): Brushwood, John S. (Author)
ISBN: 0292700709     ISBN-13: 9780292700703
Publisher: University of Texas Press
OUR PRICE:   $29.70  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: January 1972
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | Caribbean & Latin American
Dewey: 863
LCCN: 65027534
Series: Texas Pan-American Series
Physical Information: 0.69" H x 6" W x 9" (1.00 lbs) 306 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Latin America
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Mexico in Its Novel is a perceptive examination of the Mexican reality as revealed through the nation's novel. The author presents the Mexican novel as a cultural phenomenon: a manifestation of the impact of history upon the nation, an attempt by a people to come to grips with and understand what has happened and is happening to them. Written in a clear and graceful style, this study examines the life of the novel as a genre against the background of Mexican chronology. It begins with a survey of the mid-twentieth-century novel, the Mexican novel which came of age in the period following the 1947 publication of Agustín Yáñez's The Edge of the Storm. During this time the novel resolved some of its most complicated problems and, as a result, offered a wider and deeper view of reality. Having established this circumstance, John Brushwood goes back in time to the Conquest and then moves forward to the twentieth-century novel. Passing from the Colonial Period into the nineteenth century, the author recognizes the relationship between Romanticism and the desire for logical social behavior, and then views this relationship in the perspective of the Reform, an attempt to bring order out of chaos. The novel under the Díaz dictatorship is seen in three different phases, and the last Díaz chapter actually moves into the Revolution itself. The novel during the years of fighting is considered along with the first post-Revolutionary fiction. From that point the developing conflict within Mexican reality itself--a conflict between introversion and extroversion, nationalism and cosmopolitanism--reaches out to seek its solution in the novels of the first chapter.

Contributor Bio(s): Brushwood, John S.: - John S. Brushwood (1920–2007) was the Roy A. Roberts Professor of Latin American Literature at the University of Kansas.