Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory

The controversies surrounding the term postmodernism suggest a number of differences in the production, aesthetics, and critical backgrounds involving the making of and writing about recent fictional texts. Postmodernist texts, filmic and literary, are characterized by the coexistence of different g...

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Main Author: Anelise Reich Corseuil
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2008-04-01
Series:Ilha do Desterro
Online Access:http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/12064
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spelling doaj-83606889252e4bdf997266c224413aba2020-11-24T22:45:12ZengUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaIlha do Desterro 0101-48462175-80262008-04-01032177187Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegoryAnelise Reich CorseuilThe controversies surrounding the term postmodernism suggest a number of differences in the production, aesthetics, and critical backgrounds involving the making of and writing about recent fictional texts. Postmodernist texts, filmic and literary, are characterized by the coexistence of different genres, the conjunction of both high and mass culture, and the representation of the historical past. Critics like Fredric
 Jameson and Guy Debord have questioned the validity of such historical representations, which are said to transform historical past into sources for stylistic forms and historical crisis into commodities to be easily consumed by audiences1. By contrast to the alleged ahistoricism of postmodernist representations, as defined by Jameson, in his article
 Ò“Third-World Literature in the Era of Multinational Capital,” thirdworld texts have been defined as “nationalist” or “allegorical.”2 The controversies surrounding the term postmodernism suggest a number of differences in the production, aesthetics, and critical backgrounds involving the making of and writing about recent fictional texts. Postmodernist texts, filmic and literary, are characterized by the coexistence of different genres, the conjunction of both high and mass culture, and the representation of the historical past. Critics like Fredric
 Jameson and Guy Debord have questioned the validity of such historical representations, which are said to transform historical past into sources for stylistic forms and historical crisis into commodities to be easily consumed by audiences1. By contrast to the alleged ahistoricism of postmodernist representations, as defined by Jameson, in his article
 Ò“Third-World Literature in the Era of Multinational Capital,” thirdworld texts have been defined as “nationalist” or “allegorical.”2 http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/12064
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anelise Reich Corseuil
spellingShingle Anelise Reich Corseuil
Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory
Ilha do Desterro
author_facet Anelise Reich Corseuil
author_sort Anelise Reich Corseuil
title Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory
title_short Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory
title_full Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory
title_fullStr Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory
title_full_unstemmed Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory Reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory
title_sort reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory reconstructing latin american history in walker and the mission: postmodernism and allegory
publisher Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
series Ilha do Desterro
issn 0101-4846
2175-8026
publishDate 2008-04-01
description The controversies surrounding the term postmodernism suggest a number of differences in the production, aesthetics, and critical backgrounds involving the making of and writing about recent fictional texts. Postmodernist texts, filmic and literary, are characterized by the coexistence of different genres, the conjunction of both high and mass culture, and the representation of the historical past. Critics like Fredric
 Jameson and Guy Debord have questioned the validity of such historical representations, which are said to transform historical past into sources for stylistic forms and historical crisis into commodities to be easily consumed by audiences1. By contrast to the alleged ahistoricism of postmodernist representations, as defined by Jameson, in his article
 Ò“Third-World Literature in the Era of Multinational Capital,” thirdworld texts have been defined as “nationalist” or “allegorical.”2 The controversies surrounding the term postmodernism suggest a number of differences in the production, aesthetics, and critical backgrounds involving the making of and writing about recent fictional texts. Postmodernist texts, filmic and literary, are characterized by the coexistence of different genres, the conjunction of both high and mass culture, and the representation of the historical past. Critics like Fredric
 Jameson and Guy Debord have questioned the validity of such historical representations, which are said to transform historical past into sources for stylistic forms and historical crisis into commodities to be easily consumed by audiences1. By contrast to the alleged ahistoricism of postmodernist representations, as defined by Jameson, in his article
 Ò“Third-World Literature in the Era of Multinational Capital,” thirdworld texts have been defined as “nationalist” or “allegorical.”2
url http://www.periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/12064
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