Ghost-watching American modernity

Ghost-watching American modernity
About this book
In Ghost-Watching American Modernity, Mar̕a del Pilar Blanco revisits nineteenth- and twentieth-century texts from Spanish America and the United States to ask how different landscapes are represented as haunted sites. Moving from foundational fictions to Westerns, Blanco explores the diverse ways in which ghosts and haunting emerge across the American hemisphere for authors who are preoccupied with evoking the experience of geographical transformations during a period of unprecedented development.
The book offers an innovative approach that seeks to understand ghosts in their local specificity, rather than as products of generic conventions or as allegories of hidden desires. Its chapters pursue formally attentive readings of texts by Domingo Sarmiento, Henry James, Još Marť, W. E. B. Du Bois, Juan Rulfo, Felisberto Herǹndez, and Clint Eastwood. In an intervention that will reconfigure the critical uses of spectrality for scholars in U.S./Latin American Studies, narrative theory, and comparative literature, Blanco advances ghost-watching as a method for rediscovering haunting on its own terms.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL16215379W
Subjects
Nationalism in literatureLandscapes in literatureHistory and criticismAmerican literatureGhosts in literatureHaunted placesSpanish American literatureComparative literatureLatin American and AmericanAmerican and Latin AmericanLiteraryBIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHYComparative literature, american and latin americanAmerican literature, history and criticism, 19th centuryAmerican literature, history and criticism, 20th century