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Colonialism and Race in Luso-Hispanic Literature »

Book cover image of Colonialism and Race in Luso-Hispanic Literature by Jerome C. Branche

Authors: Jerome C. Branche
ISBN-13: 9780826216137, ISBN-10: 0826216137
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: University of Missouri Press
Date Published: February 2006
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Jerome C. Branche

Jerome C. Branche is Associate Professor of Hispanic Languages and Literatures at the University of Pittsburgh.

Book Synopsis

In Colonialism and Race in Luso-Hispanic Literature, Jerome C. Branche examines race naming and race making in the modern period (1415–1948). During this time, racism, a partner to both slavery and colonial exploitation, took myriad discursive forms, ranging from the reflections and treatises of philosophers and scientists to travel writing, novels, poetry, drama, and the grammar of everyday life. Branche’s main premise is that modern race making went hand in hand with European expansion, the colonial enterprise, and the international development of capitalism.

Branche looks at the racially partisan works of the Luso-Hispanic canon to document just how long lasting, widespread, and deep the feelings they expressed were. He also illustrates how important race as narrative has been and continues to be. Branche pays particular attention to the Portuguese travel writing of the mid-fifteenth century, Spanish drama of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, Cuban and Brazilian antislavery texts of the nineteenth century, and the Afro-Antillean negrismo movement of the twentieth century.

While Colonialism and Race in Luso-Hispanic Literature complements important studies of the 1970s and 1990s that treat black identity in the Spanish literary tradition, at the same time its range is wider than many other works because of the inclusion of the Luso-Brazilian dimension, its examination of extraliterary texts, and its coverage of a broader time frame. Branche’s marriage of postcolonial and cultural theory with his own close readings of related texts leads to a provocative reconsideration of how the Negro was portrayed in Latin American cultural discourse.

Table of Contents

1Iberian antecedents32
2Slavery and the syntax of subpersonhood81
3Tex de mulato : race, writing, and the antislavery premise114
4Negrism, modernism, nationalism, and a Palesian paradox162
5Menegildo, Macandal, and marvelous realism : of iconicity and otherness212

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