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Chapter 22 - Textual Figures and Modalities of Change: The Soldier, the Translator, the Plebeian, and the Woman Chronicler

from Part VI - Identities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 November 2022

Rocío Quispe-Agnoli
Affiliation:
Michigan State University
Amber Brian
Affiliation:
University of Iowa
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Summary

Transition, understood as transformation and displacement, defines early Latin American textualities, where forms of rhetoric, genres, loci of enunciation are crossed within the cultural quagmire of conquest and the colonial order. This process leads to the difficult coexistence of the archaic and the new, tradition and rupture that become evident in the emergence of a new configuration of identities that shed light on “entrelugares” (in-between spaces), which become the foundation of the Latin American literary tradition. This essay proposes four textual figures that delimit new identities: the soldier-conqueror, the translator-migrant, the plebeian, and the woman chronicler. These figures are studied in a range of sixteenth-century texts including chronicles, histories, letters, and reports from New Spain, Peru, and Río de la Plata.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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