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Eleodora - Las Consecuencias (Spanish, Paperback)
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Eleodora - Las Consecuencias (Spanish, Paperback)
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Eleodora (1887) and Las consecuencias (1889) conform a singular
example within Mercedes Cabello de Carbonera's (1842- 1909)
literary production, Though the usual critique tend to consider
both as the same novel, because they share the same plot, there are
manifold reasons to differentiate them, including their respective
placements in different stages of the author's production. The
former stands closer to the romantic drama, whilst the latter shows
the marked naturalistic influence of the author's latest novels.
Eleodora and Las consecuencias may be regarded as a rewriting
process, thus revealing the strategies used for constructing the
new aesthetics: title change, new ending, the complexities of
supporting characters, the scientific terms, the descriptions, etc.
At her release Eleodora benefitted from Ricardo Palma's support: it
is him who endorsed and published it in the Ateneo de Lima. Cabello
had based the plot on his A Mother's Love tradition, and had
dedicated him the novel. Las consecuencias, much more voluminous,
abandons this elite attitude as it appears serialized in several
issues of La Nacion and as a book, that same year, but is received
with negative criticism, very similar to the reaction arisen by
Blanca Sol. Two years span between these two novels of so diverse
aesthetics, a fact that be interpreted as revealing the tension
about what a woman should and should not write, the struggle
between canon and transgression. By taking this stance Mercedes
Cabello de Carbonera opted for the harsh path. This edition by
Monica Cardenas has a special interest for the Latin American
Feminist Literature critique. It allows reading under all the
scientific criteria two novels by Mercedes Cabello de Carbonera,
unpublished since 1889. Peruvian Mercedes Cabello de Carbonera was
an exceptional writer, whose fame equaled to Juana Manuela
Gorriti's and Emilia Pardo Bazan's. Monica Cardenas has recovered
Eleodora, the first version of Las consecuencias, and shows how the
aesthetics of sublime alternates with the grotesque, an inheritance
from the romantic period. The Cabellos' human types show the turn
of the Century ideology. As the editor puts it: "Mercedes Cabellos'
novels are a showcase of the traps surrounding the Lima society
women of the nineteenth century ...] the novel shows a
contradictory modernity." Thanks to this research, with which
Monica Cardenas completes her doctoral thesis in France, it becomes
possible to make a genetic critique of the rewriting techniques and
the narrative strategies used by Cabello de Carbonera in the
passage from one novel to the other. Isabelle Tauzin-Castellanos.
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