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Magical Realism
Theory, History, Community
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Edited by:
Lois Parkinson Zamora
and Wendy B. Faris
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
1995
About this book
Magical realism is often regarded as a regional trend, restricted to the Latin American writers who popularized it as a literary form. In this critical anthology, the first of its kind, editors Lois Parkinson Zamora and Wendy B. Faris show magical realism to be an international movement with a wide-ranging history and a significant influence among the literatures of the world. In essays on texts by writers as diverse as Toni Morrison, Günter Grass, Salman Rushdie, Derek Walcott, Abe Kobo, Gabriel García Márquez, and many others, magical realism is examined as a worldwide phenomenon.
Presenting the first English translation of Franz Roh’s 1925 essay in which the term magical realism was coined, as well as Alejo Carpentier’s classic 1949 essay that introduced the concept of lo real maravilloso to the Americas, this anthology begins by tracing the foundations of magical realism from its origins in the art world to its current literary contexts. It offers a broad range of critical perspectives and theoretical approaches to this movement, as well as intensive analyses of various cultural traditions and individual texts from Eastern Europe, Asia, North America, Africa, the Caribbean, and Australia, in addition to those from Latin America. In situating magical realism within the expanse of literary and cultural history, this collection describes a mode of writing that has been a catalyst in the development of new regional literatures and a revitalizing force for more established narrative traditions—writing particularly alive in postcolonial contexts and a major component of postmodernist fiction.
Presenting the first English translation of Franz Roh’s 1925 essay in which the term magical realism was coined, as well as Alejo Carpentier’s classic 1949 essay that introduced the concept of lo real maravilloso to the Americas, this anthology begins by tracing the foundations of magical realism from its origins in the art world to its current literary contexts. It offers a broad range of critical perspectives and theoretical approaches to this movement, as well as intensive analyses of various cultural traditions and individual texts from Eastern Europe, Asia, North America, Africa, the Caribbean, and Australia, in addition to those from Latin America. In situating magical realism within the expanse of literary and cultural history, this collection describes a mode of writing that has been a catalyst in the development of new regional literatures and a revitalizing force for more established narrative traditions—writing particularly alive in postcolonial contexts and a major component of postmodernist fiction.
Author / Editor information
Lois Parkinson Zamora is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Houston.
Wendy B. Faris is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Texas, Arlington.
Reviews
"This critical collection combines astute and graceful interpretations of well-known literary texts from the Americas while at the same time displaying a rich global understanding of the broad reach of magical realism. Fashioning subtle rethinkings of the magical realist movement, it will shape discussion of postmodern and postcolonial literary histories."—José David Saldívar, University of California, Berkeley
"Zamora and Faris persuasively support their claim that magical realism is not only—or even mainly—a Latin American phenomenon, as is usually thought, but a truly international development of the last half century or so and, a major, perhaps the major, component of postmodernist fiction."—Matei Calinescu, Indiana University
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Frontmatter
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CONTENTS
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction: Daiquiri Birds and Flaubertian Parrot(ie)s
1 - I. Foundations
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Magic Realism: Post-Expressionism (1925)
15 -
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Magic Realism, New Objectivity, and the Arts during the Weimar Republic
33 -
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On the Marvelous Real in America (1949)
75 -
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The Baroque and the Marvelous Real (1975)
89 -
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Magical Realism in Spanish American Fiction (1955)
109 -
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Magical Realism in Spanish American Literature (1967)
119 -
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The Territorialization of the Imaginary in Latin America: Self-Affirmation and Resistance to Metropolitan Paradigms
125 -
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Sources of Magic Realism/Supplements to Realism in Contemporary Latin American Literature
145 - II. Theory
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Scheherazade's Children: Magical Realism and Postmodern Fiction
163 -
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Magic Realism and Postmodernism: Decentering Privileged Centers
191 -
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The Metamorphoses of Fictional Space: Magical Realism
209 -
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The Textualization of the Reader in Magical Realist Fiction
235 -
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Psychic Realism, Mythic Realism, Grotesque Realism: Variations on Magic Realism in Contemporary Literature in English
249 - III. History
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Magical Realism, Compensatory Vision, and Felt History: Classical Realism Transformed in The White Hotel
267 -
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Past-On Stories: History and the Magically Real, Morrison and Allende on Call
285 -
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Narrative Trickery and Performative Historiography: Fictional Representation of National Identity in Graham Swift, Peter Carey, and Mordecai Richler
305 -
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Saleem Fathered by Oskar: Midnight's Children, Magic Realism, and The Tin Drum
329 -
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Magical Archetypes: Midlife Miracles in The Satanic Verses
347 -
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Derek Walcott and Alejo Carpentier: Nature, History, and the Caribbean Writer
371 - IV. Community
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Magic Realism as Postcolonial Discourse
407 -
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Metoikoi and Magical Realism in the Maghrebian Narratives of Tahar ben Jelloun and Abdelkebir Khatibi
427 -
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The Magic of Identity: Magic Realism in Modern Japanese Fiction
451 -
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Roads of "Exquisite Mysterious Muck": The Magical Journey through the City in William Kennedy's Ironweed, John Cheever's "The Enormous Radio," and Donald Barthelme's "City Life"
477 -
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Magical Romance/Magical Realism: Ghosts in U.S. and Latin American Fiction
497 -
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Selected Bibliography
551 -
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Contributors
559 -
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Index
563
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
November 14, 1995
eBook ISBN:
9780822397212
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
592
Other:
11 illustrations