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Rulfo, Juan --- Mexico --- Social life and customs
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"Juan Rulfo, 1917-1986, is one of the three greatest writers of twentieth-century Mexico together with Carlos Fuentes and Octavio Paz. A Companion to Juan Rulfo is the most comprehensive modern study of Rulfo. The first sections situate his life and work in the historical and political context of the Mexican Revolution and Cristero Wars and within the interlinking currents of specifically national and wider Western literary and cultural traditions. Later sections offer detailed analyses of the short stories, El Llano en llamas, the novel Pedro Páramo, the novella El gallo de oro and of Rulfo's substantial photographic work, the importance of which has only recently been grasped. Throughout the study the focus is to bring into a productive dialogue the different dimensions of Rulfo's texts : the materiality of his hauntingly strange poetic prose, the disturbing instability of meaning and identity, the alienation caused by violence and injustice."-- Publisher's description.
Rulfo, Juan --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Crítica e interpretación --- Rulfo Vizcaíno, Juan, --- Vizcaíno, Juan Rulfo, --- Rulfo, J. --- Pérez Rulfo Vizcaíno, Juan Nepomucenco Carlos, --- רולפו, חואן, --- رولفو، خوان, --- Rulfo, Juan.
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Literature and society --- Spanish American literature --- Tragic, The, in literature. --- History and criticism. --- Borges, Jorge Luis, --- Rulfo, Juan. --- Vallejo, César, --- Piglia, Ricardo.
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This is the first extended, English-language study to focus exclusively on the fiction of Juan Rulfo in over twenty years. It contains innovative analyses of a selection of short stories from Rulfo's collection, El llano en llamas (1953). It also examines in great depth two of the main characters of Pedro Páramo (1955), Rulfo's masterpiece and only novel. The book shows how Rulfo's works can be read as exercises in irony directed against the rhetoric of post-Revolutionary Mexican governments. It also demonstrates the relevance of certain legacies of colony in Rulfo's use of irony. Successive Mexican governments promoted a vision of post-Revolutionary society founded on specific notions of ethnicity, family, nation, education, religion and rural politics. The author combines examination of the speeches, images and newspaper articles which disseminated this vision with incisive literary analyses of Rulfo's work. These analyses are informed both by his original theory of irony, based on "internal" and "external" referents, and by existing postcolonial theories, particularly those of Homi K. Bhabha. Amit Thakkar is a Lecturer in Hispanic Studies at Lancaster University.
Irony in literature. --- Rulfo, Juan --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Rulfo Vizcaíno, Juan, --- Vizcaíno, Juan Rulfo, --- Rulfo, J. --- Pérez Rulfo Vizcaíno, Juan Nepomucenco Carlos, --- רולפו, חואן, --- رولفو، خوان, --- Fiction. --- Irony. --- Juan Rulfo. --- Pedro Páramo. --- Postcolonialism. --- Revolution. --- Short Stories.
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