Titre | Manuel González Prada's “The Slaves of the Church”: From exclusion to inclusion in the postcolonial debate1 | |
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Auteur | Thomas Ward | |
Revue | Amerika | |
Numéro | no 17, 2018 Autour de Manuel GONZÁLEZ PRADA (Lima, 5 janvier 1844 – Lima, 22 juillet 1918) | |
Rubrique / Thématique | Dossier thématique Féminisme |
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Résumé anglais |
The Peruvian poet and essayist Manuel González Prada deserves to be considered among the authors known worldwide as post-colonial theorists. Like José Carlos Mariátegui and José María Arguedas, González Prada is accorded a primary place in Peruvian decolonial thought, but mainly in Peru. In the international orbit of literary criticism or of cultural or postcolonial studies, however, he is only remembered in anthologies with the inclusion of a poem or his perceived-as-representative essay “Our Indians”; or with sporadic critical articles appearing on some aspect of his oeuvre. While authors such as Achebe (Nigeria), Ngũugĩ (Kenya), and Bhabha (India/UK/USA) are included in the category “postcolonial”, rarely are authors from Latin America or Latino authors from the United States included. This article attempts a small step toward rectifying the paradoxical colonialist exclusion of Hispanics from Anglophone Postcolonial Studies by studying González Prada's early twentieth-century writing that compared women's subordinate condition to men as “slavery”, a slavery resulting in part from the Church's view of women. The primary essay studied, “The Slaves of the Church”, dates from 1904. Source : Éditeur (via OpenEdition Journals) |
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Article en ligne | http://journals.openedition.org/amerika/8400 |