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Book Details
Abstract
Think of Latin America and what do you see? Escape? Adventure? Chaos? Oblivion? Lost Worlds explores how these stereotypes came into being and what they tells us about ourselves.
Examining a range of texts, from Southey's epics to Naipaul's essays, from Conan Doyle's gentlemen adventurers to Kerouac's restless hipsters, this book reveals the role that Latin America has played in British, US and Australian endeavours in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Over the last 200 years, Latin America has served the West as an imaginary realm where its highest hopes and deepest anxieties might be realised.
'Provides a remarkable gift to postcolonial studies. The case could not be more thoroughly made for Latin America as fecund country for the generation of frank and compromising fantasies in British, American and Australian literature'
Professor David Atwell, University of York
'A lucidly written, illuminating account of how both an imagined and real Latin America has become a privileged symbolic site for working through the crises of national identity of Britain, the United States and Australia'
Professor Noël Valis, Yale University
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Cover | Cover | ||
Contents | v | ||
List of Illustrations | vi | ||
Acknowledgements | vii | ||
Preface: Lost Worlds | xiii | ||
Introduction: The Half-Light | 1 | ||
1. The News from Nowhere | 14 | ||
2. Adventures and Anxieties | 38 | ||
3. TheLast of England | 77 | ||
4. South of the Border | 114 | ||
5. Dreaming of Pele | 147 | ||
6. Fearful Symmetry | 173 | ||
Conclusion: Southward Ho! | 196 | ||
Notes | 200 | ||
Works Cited | 224 | ||
Index | 248 |