Jose Marti's "Our America" : from national to hemispheric cultural studies
著者
書誌事項
Jose Marti's "Our America" : from national to hemispheric cultural studies
(New Americanists)
Duke University Press, 1998
- : cloth
- : pbk
大学図書館所蔵 全2件
  青森
  岩手
  宮城
  秋田
  山形
  福島
  茨城
  栃木
  群馬
  埼玉
  千葉
  東京
  神奈川
  新潟
  富山
  石川
  福井
  山梨
  長野
  岐阜
  静岡
  愛知
  三重
  滋賀
  京都
  大阪
  兵庫
  奈良
  和歌山
  鳥取
  島根
  岡山
  広島
  山口
  徳島
  香川
  愛媛
  高知
  福岡
  佐賀
  長崎
  熊本
  大分
  宮崎
  鹿児島
  沖縄
  韓国
  中国
  タイ
  イギリス
  ドイツ
  スイス
  フランス
  ベルギー
  オランダ
  スウェーデン
  ノルウェー
  アメリカ
注記
Includes index
内容説明・目次
- 巻冊次
-
: cloth ISBN 9780822321330
内容説明
Considerable attention has been given to Cuban poet, essayist, and activist Jose Marti's 1891 essay "Nuestra America," but relatively little has been paid to the rest of the journalistic work that Marti produced during his fourteen-year exile in the United States. In Jose Marti's Our America, Jeffrey Belnap and Raul Fernandez present essays from Latin American, Caribbean, and U.S.-based scholars who consider Marti's rich and underexplored body of work and position Marti as an emblem of New American studies.
A Cuban exile from 1881 to 1895, Marti was a correspondent writing in New York for various Latin American newspapers. Grasping the significance of rising U.S. imperial power, he came to understand the Americas as a complex system of kindred-but not equal-national formations whose cultural and political integrity was threatened by the overbearing aggressiveness of the United States. This collection explores how in his journalistic work Marti critiques U.S. racism, imperialism, and capitalism; warns Latin America of impending U.S. geographical, cultural, and economic annexation; and calls for recognition of the diversity of America's cultural voices. Reinforcing Marti's hemispheric vision with essays by a wide range of scholars who investigate his analysis of the United States, his significance as a Latino outsider, and his analyses of Latin American cultural politics, this volume explores the affinities between Marti's thought and current reexaminations of what it means to study America.
Jose Marti's Our America offers a new understanding of Marti's ambiguous and problematic relation with the United States and will engage scholars and students in American, Latin American, and Latino studies as well as those interested in cultural, postcolonial, gender, and ethnic studies.Contributors. Jeffrey Belnap, Raul Fernandez, Ada Ferrer, Susan Gillman, George Lipsitz, Oscar Marti, David Noble, Donald E. Pease, Beatrice Pita, Brenda Gayle Plummer, Susana Rotker, Jose David Saldivar, Rosaura Sanchez, Enrico Mario Santi, Doris Sommer, Brook Thomas
目次
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction: The Architectonics of Jose Marti's "Our Americanisms" / Jeffrey Belnap and Raul Fernandez 1
I. Writing across the Line: Culture, Geography, and the "Latino Outsider"
Jose Marti, Alexis de Tocqueville, and the Politics of Displacement / Donald E. Pease 27
The (Political) Exile Gaze in Marti's Writing on the United States / Susana Rotker 58
Jose Marti, Author of Walt Whitman / Doris Sommer 77
Ramona in "Our America" / Susan Gillman 91
II. Annexationist Designs and the End(s) of Manifest Destiny
Dismantling the Collossus: Marti and Ruiz de Burton on the Formulation of Anglo America / Rosaura Sanchez 115
Engendering Critique: Race, Class, and Gender in Ruiz de Burton and Marti / Beatrice Pita 129
Nuestra America's Borders: Remapping American Cultural Studies / Jose David Saldivar 145
III. Marti's Prescriptive Map of Our America
"Our America," the Gilded Age, and the Crisis of Latinamericanism / Enrico Mario Santi 179
Headbands, Hemp Sandals, and Headdresses: The Dialectics of Dress and Self-Conception in Marti's "Our America" / Jeffrey Belnap 191
Firmin and Marti at the Intersection of Pan-Americanism and Pan-Africanism / Brenda Gayle Plummer 210
The Silence of Patriots: Race and Nationalism in Marti's Cuba / Ada Ferrer 228
IV. "Our Americanism" in the Age of "Globalization": Contemporary Frontiers
The Anglo-Protestant Monopolization of "America" / David W. Noble 253
Frederick Jackson Turner, Jose Marti, and Finding a Home on the Range / Brook Thomas 275
Their America and Ours: Intercultural Communication in the Context of "Our America" / George Lipsitz 293
Jose Marti and the Heroic Image / Oscar R. Marti 317
Index 339
Contributors 343
- 巻冊次
-
: pbk ISBN 9780822322658
内容説明
Considerable attention has been given to Cuban poet, essayist, and activist Jose Marti's 1891 essay "Nuestra America," but relatively little has been paid to the rest of the journalistic work that Marti produced during his fourteen-year exile in the United States. In Jose Marti's Our America, Jeffrey Belnap and Raul Fernandez present essays from Latin American, Caribbean, and U.S.-based scholars who consider Marti's rich and underexplored body of work and position Marti as an emblem of New American studies. A Cuban exile from 1881 to 1895, Marti was a correspondent writing in New York for various Latin American newspapers. Grasping the significance of rising U.S. imperial power, he came to understand the Americas as a complex system of kindred-but not equal-national formations whose cultural and political integrity was threatened by the overbearing aggressiveness of the United States. This collection explores how in his journalistic work Marti critiques U.S. racism, imperialism, and capitalism; warns Latin America of impending U.S. geographical, cultural, and economic annexation; and calls for recognition of the diversity of America's cultural voices.
Reinforcing Marti's hemispheric vision with essays by a wide range of scholars who investigate his analysis of the United States, his significance as a Latino outsider, and his analyses of Latin American cultural politics, this volume explores the affinities between Marti's thought and current reexaminations of what it means to study America. Jose Marti's Our America offers a new understanding of Marti's ambiguous and problematic relation with the United States and will engage scholars and students in American, Latin American, and Latino studies as well as those interested in cultural, postcolonial, gender, and ethnic studies. Contributors. Jeffrey Belnap, Raul Fernandez, Ada Ferrer, Susan Gillman, George Lipsitz, Oscar Marti, David Noble, Donald E. Pease, Beatrice Pita, Brenda Gayle Plummer, Susana Rotker, Jose David Saldivar, Rosaura Sanchez, Enrico Mario Santi, Doris Sommer, Brook Thomas
目次
Acknowledgments vii Introduction: The Architectonics of Jose Marti's "Our Americanisms" / Jeffrey Belnap and Raul Fernandez 1 I. Writing across the Line: Culture, Geography, and the "Latino Outsider" Jose Marti, Alexis de Tocqueville, and the Politics of Displacement / Donald E. Pease 27 The (Political) Exile Gaze in Marti's Writing on the United States / Susana Rotker 58 Jose Marti, Author of Walt Whitman / Doris Sommer 77 Ramona in "Our America" / Susan Gillman 91 II. Annexationist Designs and the End(s) of Manifest Destiny Dismantling the Collossus: Marti and Ruiz de Burton on the Formulation of Anglo America / Rosaura Sanchez 115 Engendering Critique: Race, Class, and Gender in Ruiz de Burton and Marti / Beatrice Pita 129 Nuestra America's Borders: Remapping American Cultural Studies / Jose David Saldivar 145 III. Marti's Prescriptive Map of Our America "Our America," the Gilded Age, and the Crisis of Latinamericanism / Enrico Mario Santi 179 Headbands, Hemp Sandals, and Headdresses: The Dialectics of Dress and Self-Conception in Marti's "Our America" / Jeffrey Belnap 191 Firmin and Marti at the Intersection of Pan-Americanism and Pan-Africanism / Brenda Gayle Plummer 210 The Silence of Patriots: Race and Nationalism in Marti's Cuba / Ada Ferrer 228 IV. "Our Americanism" in the Age of "Globalization": Contemporary Frontiers The Anglo-Protestant Monopolization of "America" / David W. Noble 253 Frederick Jackson Turner, Jose Marti, and Finding a Home on the Range / Brook Thomas 275 Their America and Ours: Intercultural Communication in the Context of "Our America" / George Lipsitz 293 Jose Marti and the Heroic Image / Oscar R. Marti 317 Index 339 Contributors 343
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