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The Lights of Home

A Century of Latin American Writers in Paris

Jason Weiss author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Published:11th Oct '02

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The Lights of Home cover

Because of political, cultural, or economic difficulties in their homelands, Latin American writers have often sought refuge abroad. Their independent searches for a haven in which to write often ended in Paris, long a city of writes in exile. This is more than solely a group biography of these writers or an explication of material they wrote about Paris; it is also a luminous account of the work they wrote while in Paris, often based in their homelands. It explores how Paris reacted to this wave of Latin American writers and how these writers absorbed Parisian influences and welded them to their own traditions setting the stage for immense success and power of works coming from Central and South America over the last half of the twentieth century.

"As theoretical constructs turn more and more of the past into an abstraction, detailed cultural histories like The Lights of Home give us the breathing space to reimagine global literary life. Deeply informed and painstakingly researched, Jason Weiss's lively work is a truly useful contribution." -- Ammiel Alcalay, author of From theWarring Factions and After Jews and Arabs: RemakingLevantine Culture
"The Lights of Home is an information-packed excellent introduction to expatriate Latin American and Caribbean writers in Paris . . . It marks a major addition to critical writing on several of the principal poets, novelists and essayists of our time." -- Timothy Reiss, Professor of Comparative Literature at New York University
"In a study that combines a panoramic breadth of perspective with a compelling love of detail, Jason Weiss brilliantly explores the fruitful tension between the seductions of exile and the lure of home in the writings of an array of twentieth-century Spanish American writers who lived and worked in Paris. Based on a prodigious amount of research, this fascinating examination of the experience of cultural displacement from Rubén Darío to Hector Bianciotti will change the way we view Spanish American literature." -- Maarten van Delden, Chairman of the Department of Hispanic Studies at Rice University
"Jason Weiss's thoroughgoing and delving investigation shows how Paris was an even more bountiful movable feast for Latin American writers than it was for their northern colleagues. It also shows the great part the city played in the engendering of what came to be called magic realism." -- Gregory Rabassa, Distinguished Professor at Queens College and translator of One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
"Weiss intersperses the studies with insightful meditations on aspects of [the writers'] circumstances, such as life in a different language, relationships with fellow exiles and evolving attitudes toward the myth of Paris." -- Alicia Austin, France Today

ISBN: 9780415940139

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 530g

288 pages