Material and immaterial, dead and alive, tangible and intangible: the ghost is an aporia that does not belong in the past or the present. Moreover, a single specter always conjures more of the like, and we are suddenly surrounded, haunted on every front. The paradoxical exercise of conjuring and exorcising apparitions has brought them to inhabit distinctive regions in literary scholarship. We think of ghosts, for instance, as characters belonging to specific genres and treat them as figurations of moral or psychological anxieties. In other words, specific theoretical tools are used to grapple with the specter's disruption. María del Pilar Blanco's Ghost-Watching American Modernity: Haunting, Landscape, and the Hemispheric Imagination tests these tools and invites the reader to question some of these assumptions. Focusing on the depiction of haunted spaces in the works of José Martí, Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, Felisberto Hernández, Henry James, and W. E. B. Du Bois, Blanco...
Ghost-Watching American Modernity: Haunting, Landscape, and the Hemispheric Imagination
josé álvarez specializes in nineteenth- and twentieth- century Spanish American literature and British Gothic fiction. After graduating from the Universidad Católica del Perú, he completed his graduate work in Spanish American Literature and Latin American Studies at Penn State University. He is currently an Assistant Professor of Spanish at South Dakota State University. His academic essays have appeared in Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hispánicos and The Latin American Literary Review. His current research focuses on Spanish American fantastic and detective fiction, and he is currently working on a book manuscript entitled Spanish American Gothic.
José Álvarez; Ghost-Watching American Modernity: Haunting, Landscape, and the Hemispheric Imagination. Comparative Literature Studies 1 February 2015; 52 (1): 178–180. doi: https://doi.org/10.5325/complitstudies.52.1.0178
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