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La Rosa Muerta (Spanish, Paperback, Annotated edition)
Loot Price: R506
Discovery Miles 5 060
You Save: R112
(18%)
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La Rosa Muerta (Spanish, Paperback, Annotated edition)
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List price R618
Loot Price R506
Discovery Miles 5 060
You Save R112 (18%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Aurora Cceres' compelling novel "La rosa muerta" was set in Paris
where it was published in 1914. In a work sharing formal
characteristics with modernista prose, Cceres challenged the
ideological parameters of the movement. While her protagonist
appropriated the modernista precept of women as subjects to male
veneration, she also took active control of her sexual life in a
world where husbands still treated their wives as objects. The
objects in this novel are not people but implements of
communication and medicine, reflective of the apogee of the
industrial age. The action, which takes place between Berlin and
Paris, is representative of the places that the modernistas held
dear, but the feminization of the portrayal of male-female
relations broadens the scope of the male-dominated modernista
literary paradigm. The ideal men in this novel are not the husbands
from whom women run, but medical doctors, men of science who are
liberated from chauvinist attitudes. The central character of "La
rosa muerta" accordingly falls for one of her gynecologists,
allowing for scenes in the Paris clinic that must have been
scandalous for the 1914 reading public. This novel's author Aurora
Cceres (1877-1958) has been unjustly forgotten as an interesting
adherent of the modernist movement. This European-based daughter of
a Peruvian president wrote novels, essays, travel literature and a
biography of her husband, the Guatemalan novelist Enrique Gmez
Carrillo. Her life itself is intimately intertwined with Peruvian
history, the War of the Pacific (1879-1883), the Peruvian Civil War
of 1895, and an intellectual's exile in Paris. Her essays have
recently begun to receive critical attention by scholars attempting
to understand modernism from a gendered perspective. With its
enlightened female protagonist, its scientific men, and its praise
of technology (electric lights and pneumatic mail tubes), "La rosa
muerta" appropriates modernista literary traditions and liberates
them in a riveting narrative that will certainly engage today's
undergraduate students. Its length (of only 80 pages), makes the
text suitable for upper-level Spanish courses. The novel is
especially appropriate for survey classes as well as for courses on
the novel and modernismo, broadening the horizons for what have
traditionally been male-centered reading lists. It will also be of
interest to graduate students attempting to understand literary
modernism from a gendered perspective. It is also an appropriate
object of study for researchers interested in gender studies, the
development of the novel, and in modernismo. This new modernized
edition will be a pleasant reading for undergraduate and graduate
students. Its Spanish has been updated to agree with present-day
usage and it comes in a thoroughly annotated edition with copious
footnotes to explain obscure cultural and linguistic turns of the
text. The editor, Thomas Ward, also offers a complete introduction
that locates Cceres in both modernista and Peruvian traditions.
Ward, well known for his studies on fin-de sicle Peruvian authors,
also suggests some avenues for future research. His selection of
"La rosa muerta" will please scholars and students alike as the
one-hundred year anniversary of this novel draws near.
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