Myth and Archive
Myth and Archive offers a new theory about the origin and evolution of the Latin American narrative, and about the emergence of the modern novel. Instead of following the traditional categories set up by literary history, Professor González Echevarría explores the relationship of the narrative to the language of authority: the law in the colonial period, science in the nineteenth century, and anthropology in the twentieth century. The book contains readings of major works in the tradition such as Garcilaso el Inca's Comentarios reales, Sarmiento's Facundo, Carpentier's Los pasos perdidos, and García Marquez's Cien años de soledad.
Reviews & endorsements
"...a book that will have lasting value because it opens new exegetic horizons for the study of Latin-American narrative." Antonio Fama, Canadian Review of Hispanic Studies
Product details
September 1990Hardback
9780521306829
260 pages
235 × 152 × 20 mm
0.49kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- 1. A clearing in the jungle: from Santa Monica to Macondo
- 2. The law of the letter: Garcilaso's Comentarios
- 3. A lost world re-discovered: Sarmiento's Facundo and E. da Cunha's Os Sertoes
- 4. The novel as myth and archive: ruins and relics of TIön
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.