Filial crisis and erotic politics in Black Cuban literature : daughters, sons, and lovers / Conrad Michael James
Tipo de material: TextoIdioma: Inglés Series Monografías (Tamesis) ; 387Detalles de publicación: Woodbridge : Tamesis, 2019 Descripción: X, 189 p. ; 24 cmISBN: 9781855663381Tema(s): Literatura cubana -- Temas, motivos -- Historia y crítica -- 19 | Literatura erótica -- Historia y crítica -- Cuba -- 19Resumen: An affective reading of twentieth-century Afro-Cuban literature focussing on a set of concerns ranging from the filial to the erotic.This book proposes an affective reading of twentieth-century Afro-Cuban literature through its focus on a set of concerns ranging from the filial to the erotic. Existing scholarship on black Cuban literature tends to privilege national political and economic discourses often focusing solely on the dynamics of race in the Revolution and the place of the black writer/artist within the nation's cultural institutions. And while there is substantial engagementwith feminist and queer articulations of desire within Cuban literary studies, there remains an urgent need for a sustained analysis of black Cuban writing which investigates its preponderant concerns with themes of family, love and erotic politics-a need fully addressed in this timely bookTipo de ítem | Biblioteca de origen | Signatura | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | Reserva de ítems |
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Monografías | 06. BIBLIOTECA HUMANIDADES | 860(729.1)/JAM/fil (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | Disponible Ubicación en estantería | Bibliomaps® | 3745283960 |
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An affective reading of twentieth-century Afro-Cuban literature focussing on a set of concerns ranging from the filial to the erotic.This book proposes an affective reading of twentieth-century Afro-Cuban literature through its focus on a set of concerns ranging from the filial to the erotic. Existing scholarship on black Cuban literature tends to privilege national political and economic discourses often focusing solely on the dynamics of race in the Revolution and the place of the black writer/artist within the nation's cultural institutions. And while there is substantial engagementwith feminist and queer articulations of desire within Cuban literary studies, there remains an urgent need for a sustained analysis of black Cuban writing which investigates its preponderant concerns with themes of family, love and erotic politics-a need fully addressed in this timely book
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