University of Toronto Press
Defining and Defying Borders
About this book
Defining and Defying Borders describes how journals, magazines, and newspapers chart the complex postcolonial relationship between Spain and Latin America during the modernist era.
Author / Editor information
Vanessa Marie Fernández is an associate professor of Spanish at San Jose State University.
Reviews
“Carefully exploring and addressing the tensions in Spain and Latin America’s postcolonial relationship through the study of journals, magazines, and newspapers during the early twentieth century, Defining and Defying Borders is an insightful contribution to the field of transatlantic studies. Fernández eloquently resists the categorical divisions of Latin Americanism vs. Peninsularism to provoke a reflection on how Latin American and Spanish intellectuals were transgressing national borders through print culture.”
Alejandro Mejías-López, Associate Professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Indiana University Bloomington :
“Fernández convincingly argues that modernist literary periodicals opened a critical space for dialogue, exchange, and dispute between writers across Latin America and Spain and that it was, moreover, in those venues that the very existence and nature of Hispanic literature and culture were contested, debated, and transformed in the 1920s. Fernández’s splendid book is thus a major contribution to our rethinking of global modernism, Hispanism, and transatlantic studies.”
María del Pilar Blanco, Professor of Spanish American and Comparative Literature, University of Oxford :
“Erudite and detailed, Fernández’s Defining and Defying Borders takes readers on a journey through the friendships, disagreements, and even tragic confrontations that defined transatlantic Hispanism in the first decades of the twentieth century. Fernández brilliantly illustrates the significance of the magazine format in the development (and breakdowns) of these relations. Defining and Defying Borders is a rigorous retelling of the mirrors that Spanish and Spanish American intellectuals held up to each other during a fascinating, formative, and turbulent period.”
Ignacio M. Sánchez Prado, Professor of Spanish, Latin American Studies, and Film and Media Studies, Washington University in St. Louis, and author of Strategic Occidentalism:
“Grounded on rigorous and innovative archival research, Defining and Defying Borders offers an exciting view of magazines beyond their national contexts, offering new interpretations related to the circulation of print and ideas across the Atlantic. Vanessa Marie Fernández offers not only a lucid study of some of the key magazines in Latin America and Spain, but also a new way to conceptualize the role of the magazine in the Spanish-language world.”
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Acknowledgments
ix -
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DEFINING AND DEFYING BORDERS
1 -
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Chapter One Surpassing Colonialism: Negotiating Nationalism and Empire in Print Culture
21 -
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Chapter Two Transcultural Solidarity: Generational Shifts and Social Reform in Print Culture
51 -
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Chapter Three La Gaceta Literaria (1927–31): Postcolonial Networks, Cultural Capital, and the Literary Market
81 -
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Chapter Four Vying for Aesthetic Capital
119 -
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Epilogue Reflecting on a Medium, a Process, and a Path Forward
141 -
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Appendix Argentine, Mexican, and Spanish Journals
145 -
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Notes
157 -
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Works Cited
169 -
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Index
181