|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This study explores the social functions of literature from the
perspective of policymakers, writers, readers and residents in
contemporary Cuba. It provides a new perspective on post-59 Cuban
literature that underlines how cultural policy has made literature
a hybrid activity between elite and mass culture, with inherent
social, rather than aesthetic or political, value. Whilst many
traditional studies of Cuban literature assume either its
subjugation to politics and ideology or, conversely, its role in
resisting political discourse via a rather naive notion of artistic
freedom, this project explores the varied, dynamic and multiple
ways in which literature works in Cuban society: as a catalyst for
identity construction aimed at consensus and belonging, but also as
an instrument of self-differentiation and self-definition, even in
the more recent context of a more market-oriented system. The study
reviews policy from 1959 to the present, and presents contemporary
case studies exploring the social functions of literature for
writers, readers and ordinary Havana residents.
Available in paperback for the first time, this book brings an
original and innovative approach to a much-misunderstood aspect of
the Cuban Revolution: the place of literature and the creation of a
literary culture. Based on over 100 interviews with a wide range of
actors involved in the structures and processes that produce,
regulate, promote and consume literature on the island, the book
breaks new ground by going beyond the conventional approach (the
study of individual authors and texts) and by going beyond the
canon of texts known outside Cuba. It thus presents a historical
analysis of the evolution of literary culture from 1959 to the
present, as well as a series of more detailed case studies (on
writing workshops, the Havana Book Festival and the publishing
infrastructure) which reveal how this culture is created in
contemporary Cuba. It thus contributes a new and complex vision of
revolutionary Cuban culture which is as detailed as it is
comprehensive. -- .
Latin American Literature in Transition 1930-1980 explores the
literary landscape of the mid-twentieth-century and the texts that
were produced during that period. It takes four core areas of
thematic and conceptual focus - solidarity, aesthetics and
innovation, war, revolution and dictatorship, metropolis and ruins
- and employs them to explore the complexity, heterogeneity and
hybridity of form, genre, subject matter and discipline that
characterised literature from the period. In doing so, it uncovers
the points of transition, connection, contradiction, and tension
that shaped the work of many canonical and non-canonical authors.
It illuminates the conversations between genres, literary
movements, disciplines and modes of representation that underpin
writing form this period. Lastly, by focusing on canon and beyond,
the volume visibilizes the aesthetics, poetics, politics, and
social projects of writing, incorporating established writers, but
also writers whose work is yet to be examined in all its
complexity.
This study explores the social functions of literature from the
perspective of policymakers, writers, readers and residents in
contemporary Cuba. It provides a new perspective on post-59 Cuban
literature that underlines how cultural policy has made literature
a hybrid activity between elite and mass culture, with inherent
social, rather than aesthetic or political, value. Whilst many
traditional studies of Cuban literature assume either its
subjugation to politics and ideology or, conversely, its role in
resisting political discourse via a rather naive notion of artistic
freedom, this project explores the varied, dynamic and multiple
ways in which literature works in Cuban society: as a catalyst for
identity construction aimed at consensus and belonging, but also as
an instrument of self-differentiation and self-definition, even in
the more recent context of a more market-oriented system. The study
reviews policy from 1959 to the present, and presents contemporary
case studies exploring the social functions of literature for
writers, readers and ordinary Havana residents.
|
|