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Confluence Narratives - Ethnicity, History, and Nation-Making in the Americas (Hardcover)
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Confluence Narratives - Ethnicity, History, and Nation-Making in the Americas (Hardcover)
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Confluence Narratives: Ethnicity, History and Nation-Making in the
Americas explores how a collection of contemporary novels calls
attention to the impact of ethnicity on national identities in the
Americas. These historical narratives portray the cultural
encounters-the conflicts and alliances, peaceful borrowings and
violent seizures-that have characterized the history of the
American continents since the colonial period. In the second half
of the twentieth century, North and South American readers have
witnessed a steady output of novels that revisit moments of
cultural confluence as a means of revising national histories.
Confluence Narratives proposes that these historical novels,
published in such places as Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, the United
States, and Canada, make up a key literary genre in the Americas.
The genre links the various parts of the hemisphere together
through three common historical experiences: colonization, slavery,
and immigration. Luciano Tosta demonstrates how numerous texts from
the United States, Canada, Spanish America, the Caribbean, and
Brazil fall into the genre. The book focuses on four case studies
from ethnic groups in the Americas: Amerindians, Afro-descendants,
Jewish Americans, and Japanese Americans. Tosta uses the experience
of the American nations as a springboard to problematize the
concept of the contemporary nation, an identity marked by
border-crossings and other experiences of deterritorialization.
Based on the exploration of "confluence narratives," Tosta argues
that the "contemporary" nation is not as contemporary as one may
think. Informed by postcolonial theory and transnational and ethnic
studies, this book offers an important comparative study for and of
inter-American literature. Its analysis of the representation of
cultural encounters within distinctive national histories
underscores the complex nature of 'otherness' in the Americas, as
well as the inherently transcultural aspect of a trans-continental
American identity.
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