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In the early twentieth century, a technological revolution as well as new ideas in science and philosophy, precipitated a radical change in narrative fiction in Latin America. The avant garde novels that appeared by the 1920s forever changed discourse and structure, or the way of creating narrative fiction, and heavily influenced the creation of the internationally recognized Latin American novel of the modern era. However, this early movement has received little attention or recognition as a literary period, although it is as significant to the development of twentieth century literature as the Modernist movement was in the U.S. and Europe. Before the Boom: Latin American Revolutionary Novels of the 1920s proposes a postmodern analysis of the early twentieth century or avant-garde novel by authors from four different Latin American countries: Arqueles Vela in Mexico, Martín Adán in Peru, Pablo Palacio in Ecuador, and Roberto Arlt in Argentina. Each chapter details the socio-political context of each novel, chronicling the events that led to an artistic desire to create an entirely new voice in Latin American fiction.
Elizabeth Coonrod Martínez is Chair, Modern Languages and Literature at Sonoma State University in California.
Chapter 1 PrefaceChapter 2 AcknowledgementsChapter 3 Introduction: An Exciting and Tumultuous EraChapter 4 Mexico's First Anti-NovelChapter 5 The Madness of the Argentinean NovelChapter 6 The Rebellion of the Ecuadorean CharacterChapter 7 Nostalgia for the Future in PeruChapter 8 Conclusion: The Vanguardia LegacyChapter 9 BibliographyChapter 10 Index
....Martinez seeks to demonstrate, these Boom novels were in fact preceded by the vanguardist movement, whose concerns represented not only an obvious reaction to modernista poetry but also constituted a new approach to fiction. All academic collections.