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Catastrophic Historicism: Reading Julia de Burgos Dangerously

Catastrophic Historicism: Reading Julia de Burgos Dangerously - Paperback

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Availability:In StockContributor:Ronald Mendoza-de JesúsSeries:Idiom: Inventing Writing TheoryPublish date:2024-01-02Pages:272
Language:EnglishPublisher:Fordham University PressISBN-13:9781531505646ISBN-10:1531505643UPC:9781531505646Book Category:Literary Criticism, Social Science, PhilosophyBook Subcategory:Caribbean & Latin American, Race & Ethnic Relations, MovementsBook Topic:Critical TheorySize:9.00 x 6.00 x 0.78 inchesWeight:1.1199Product ID:SCRDGS9KKG

Catastrophic Historicism unsettles the historicist constitution of Julia de Burgos (1914-53), Puerto Rico's most iconic writer--a critical task that necessitates redefining the concept of historicism. Through readings of Aristotle, Walter Benjamin, Jacques Derrida, Werner Hamacher, and Frank Ankersmit, Mendoza-de Jes?s shows that historicism grounds historical objectivity in the historian's capacity to compose totalizing narratives that domesticate the contingency of the past. While critiques of historicism as a realism leave untouched the sovereignty of the historian, the book insists that reading the text of history requires an attunement to danger--a modality that interrupts historicism by infusing the past with a contingency that evades total appropriation.

After desedimenting the monumental tradition that has reduced de Burgos to a totemic figure, Catastrophic Historicism reads the poet's first collection, Poema en 20 surcos (1938). Mendoza-de Jes?s argues that the historicity of Poema crystallizes in the lyrical speaker's self-institution as an embodied ipseity, which requires producing racialized/gendered allegorical figures--the bearers of an abject flesh--that lack any ontological resistance to modern alienation. Rather than treating de Burgos's poetics of selfhood as the ideal image of Puerto Rican sovereignty, Mendoza-de Jes?s endangers this idealization by drawing attention to the abjection that sustains our attachments to ipseity as the form of a truly sovereign life. In this way, Catastrophic Historicism not only resets the terms of ongoing critiques of historicism in the humanities--it also intervenes in Puerto Rican historicity for the sake of its transformation.
Language:EnglishPublisher:Fordham University PressISBN-13:9781531505646ISBN-10:1531505643UPC:9781531505646Book Category:Literary Criticism, Social Science, PhilosophyBook Subcategory:Caribbean & Latin American, Race & Ethnic Relations, MovementsBook Topic:Critical TheorySize:9.00 x 6.00 x 0.78 inchesWeight:1.1199Product ID:SCRDGS9KKG
Publisher: Fordham University Press

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