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TRADICION Y RUPTURA EN LA POESIA SOCIAL DEL PERU: DE LA CONQUISTA A ANTONIO CISNEROS.BERMUDEZ-GALLEGOS, MARTHA. January 1987 (has links)
The production of dissimilar and contradictory literary discourses which originates in Latin America during the Conquest and Colonial periods has traced grave problems for literary criticism. Until the 1950's and 1960's, positivist historians and literary scholars tried to affix and evaluate this period of transatlantic transfer and acculturation without satisfactory results. The fundamental fact that had been slantedly presented by positivist historians and literary critics was the cultural shock produced by the invasion and colonization process. This cultural shock did not result in an ideal synthesis since the cultural foundations of indigenous societies were destroyed. The colonial regime incorporated advantageous aspects of the indigenous societies for its own growth and reorganized them in a disconcerting fashion for the colonized. One of the major changes to which the indigenous population was subjected was the implant of a new language. As one can clearly expect, the linguistic transference in itself produced a severe scission at the cultural level, not only from a literary perspective but from a political one as well. Semeiotically, one can propose that the sign of the new society is linguistic disjunction and that a consequence of this phenomenon is, in turn, social disjunction. The study, from an interdisciplinary perspective, analyzes the acculturation process through a close look at traditionally considered "social" oral poetic tradition and texts brought by the Spanish to America. The study of the "social" poetry in Spanish from the area today known as Peru demonstrates how these poetic discourses contribute to the acculturation process instead of fulfilling the denunciatory function of the socially oriented discourse. Ultimately, this study intends to divulge how through the use of oral and erudite European poetic tradition, the Spanish founded and established a dependent culture in the area we know as Peru and how this dependency permeates the poetry written in this area from the Sixteenth until the Twentieth century. In the Twentieth century, however, the study demonstrates through a close look at Antonio Cisneros' poetry how the contemporary Peruvian poet has taken conscience of dependency and "rewrites" Peruvian culture through truly social poetic discourse.
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Manuel Gonzalez Prada and two trends in Peruvian poetry.Statton, Marian Joyce January 1968 (has links)
While González Prada was mainly a prose writer and ideologist, he did write poetry throughout his life, beginning perhaps even before he began to write prose. Although his poetry itself had little influence on other poets, the ideas which lie behind it did. The purpose of this paper is to show that there are two incipient trends of Peruvian poetry in Prada's poems: Modernism and indigenism.
Prada’s tendency towards Modernism is found to be mainly theoretical and ideological, as his adoption of modernist style occurs when Modernism has already been established by Rubún Darío, and disappears after the publication of Exóticas in 1911.
Chocano serves as a counterpoint to Prada in showing the extent to which the latter had any real influence on the development of a particular modernist poet, and to which the full development of Modernism differed from the innovations which Prada had envisioned.
The incipient indigenism in Prada's poetry is represented in Baladas peruanas, although the point in which Prada anticipates twentieth century writers is that of the use of poetry as a vehicle for ideas, and as such is also evident in Libertarias and Presbiterianas.
The nature of Prada’s indigenism is compared to that of Chocano in order to show the extent of the modernists' failure to develop the trends which Prada had foreshadowed. / Arts, Faculty of / French, Hispanic, and Italian Studies, Department of / Graduate
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Sor María Manuela de Santa Ana una teresina peruana /Armacanqui-Tipacti, Elia J. María Manuela de Santa Ana, January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1995. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 247-254).
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Sor María Manuela de Santa Ana una teresina peruana /Armacanqui-Tipacti, Elia J. María Manuela de Santa Ana, January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1995. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 247-254).
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Los “Poemas underwood” de Martín AdánVich Flórez, Víctor 12 April 2018 (has links)
Este ensayo estudia los “Poemas underwood” que Martín Adán incluyó en “La casa de Cartón” (1928). Por sus características formales, se trata de uno de los textos más importantes de la vanguardia peruana y se trata, además, de una de las primeras y más contundentes críticas al discurso de la modernidad inaugurado en ese entonces. Me ha interesado analizar muchas de las principales imágenes de este poema a fin de rastrear no solo cuáles son los principales cambios sociales que ahí se representan, sino cómo la voz poética va configurando un contundente arsenal de respuestas críticas a ellos. / In this essay I study the “Underwood Poems” that Martin Adan included in “La Casa de Carton” (1928). Its formal characteristics make these poems one of the most important texts of the Peruvian vanguard, as well as they establish one of the most resounding criticism to the modernity discourse of the era. I am particularly interested in analyzing one of the main images of this poem in order to trace not only the principal social changes that are represented but also how the poetic voice configures a compelling armor of critical responses to these changes.
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