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The Way Out (Paperback)
Ricardo Piglia; Translated by Robert Croll
bundle available
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R482
R349
Discovery Miles 3 490
Save R133 (28%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Absent City (Paperback)
Ricardo Piglia; Translated by Sergio Waisman
bundle available
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R722
R647
Discovery Miles 6 470
Save R75 (10%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Widely acclaimed throughout Latin America after its 1992 release in
Argentina, "The Absent City" takes the form of a futuristic
detective novel. In the end, however, it is a meditation on the
nature of totalitarian regimes, on the transition to democracy
after the end of such regimes, and on the power of language to
create and define reality. Ricardo Piglia combines his trademark
avant-garde aesthetics with astute cultural and political insights
into Argentina's history and contemporary condition in this
conceptually daring and entertaining work.
The novel follows Junior, a reporter for a daily Buenos Aires
newspaper, as he attempts to locate a secret machine that contains
the mind and the memory of a woman named Elena. While Elena
produces stories that reflect on actual events in Argentina, the
police are seeking her destruction because of the revelations of
atrocities that she--the machine--is disseminating through texts
and taped recordings. The book thus portrays the race to recover
the history and memory of a city and a country where history has
largely been obliterated by political repression. Its
narratives--all part of a detective story, all part of something
more--multiply as they intersect with each other, like the streets
and avenues of Buenos Aires itself.
The second of Piglia's novels to be translated by Duke University
Press--the first was "Artifical Respiration"--this book continues
the author's quest to portray the abuses and atrocities that
characterize dictatorships as well as the difficulties associated
with making the transition to democracy. Translated and with an
introduction by Sergio Waisman, it includes a new afterword by the
author.
Acclaimed as one of the most important Latin American novels in
recent decades, Artificial Respiration is a stunning introduction
for English readers to the fiction of Ricardo Piglia. Published in
Argentina in 1981, it was written at a time when thousands of
Argentine citizens disappeared during the government's attempt to
create an authoritarian state. In part a reflection on one of the
most repressive and tragic times in Argentine history, this is one
of those rare works of fiction in which multiple philosophical,
political, and narrative dimensions are all powerfully and equally
matched.
As a prize winning detective novel, Artificial Respiration reaches
through many levels of mystery to explore the forces that have been
at play in Argentina throughout its violent history. The narrator,
a writer named Renzi, begins to look for an uncle who has vanished,
a man he knows only through a web of contradictory family stories
and an exchange of letters. Through these letters he learns about
his uncle's research into the life of Enrique Ossario, secretary to
the 19th-century Argentine dictator Rosas and spy for the
dictator's enemy. As Renzi's search leads further into his uncle's
work and to conversations with his literary and chess-playing
friends, the reader is led by Piglia to consider the nature of
Argentine identity, its literature and history, and its relation,
for example, to Europe, exile, and democracy. Finally, and made
most vividly appreciable by the retelling of a story in which Kafka
meets Hitler, it is the encounter between literature and history
that is explored.
A richly textured, intricately crafted, and startling mixture of
storytelling, inquiry, and speculation, Artificial Respiration has
established its author among the leading representatives of
contemporary Latin American letters.
The novella that gives its name to this collection is a unique and
fascinating work. The author himself is the protagonist attempting
to solve the mystery of an unpublished manuscript written by the
Argentine author Robert Arlt.
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