Spanish American Literature
Spanish American literature is the Spanish-language writing of the Americas, from colonial baroque poetry and the modernismo of Dario to Borges and beyond.
Definition
The Spanish-language literary tradition of Latin America, from colonial writing through modernismo to the major twentieth-century authors.
Scope
This topic covers Spanish-language literature from Mexico, Central and South America. It spans colonial chronicles and baroque poetry, including Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, nineteenth-century romanticism and the modernismo of Ruben Dario, the avant-garde, and the major twentieth-century fiction and poetry of Borges, Neruda, and others. It treats the encounter of indigenous, European, and African cultures and the development of a distinctive Spanish American literary identity.
Core questions
- How did colonial and baroque literature develop in Spanish America?
- What was modernismo and Ruben Dario's role in it?
- How did Borges and others transform twentieth-century fiction?
- How did indigenous and European cultures shape Spanish American literature?
Key concepts
- the colonial baroque
- modernismo
- the fantastic
- Spanish American identity
- the avant-garde
Key theories
- Modernismo
- Led by Ruben Dario, modernismo was a late-nineteenth-century movement that renewed Spanish-language poetry with cosmopolitan forms, musicality, and aestheticism.
History
Spanish American literature began with colonial chronicles and the baroque poetry of Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz. The nineteenth century brought romanticism and the renovating modernismo of Ruben Dario. The twentieth century produced the avant-garde and major figures such as Borges, Neruda, and Paz, establishing Spanish American literature as a central force in world letters.
Debates
- European influence and originality
- Critics debate how far Spanish American literature reworked European models into something original, a tension visible from the colonial baroque through modernismo.
Key figures
- Jorge Luis Borges
- Ruben Dario
- Pablo Neruda
- Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz
- Octavio Paz
Related topics
Seminal works
- borges1944
- dario1896
- echevarria1996
Frequently asked questions
- What is modernismo?
- Modernismo was a turn-of-the-twentieth-century literary movement, led by Ruben Dario, that renewed Spanish-language poetry with cosmopolitan and aesthetic innovation.
- Is Spanish American literature the same as Latin American literature?
- It is the Spanish-language part of the broader Latin American field, which also includes Brazilian (Portuguese) and Caribbean literatures.