Cannibal Modernities: Postcoloniality and the
Avant-garde in Caribbean and Brazilian Literature |
| Luís Madureira |
| 272 pages, 6 x 9 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2375-1 $55.00 |
| Paper ISBN 0-8139-2376-X $19.50 |
| New World
Studies |
 |
Unique in its inclusion of Brazil in a comparative study of literary
texts and their engagement with Western modernity, Cannibal
Modernities is the first postcolonial study to show how the
“peripheral” replications of modernity in contemporary
Caribbean and Latin American texts differ crucially from their
European models.
Luís Madureira addresses issues that so many postcolonial
theorists have struggled with, particularly the complx interactions
and antagonisms between indigenous cultures and the imperial cultures
imposed upon them and the effort to “provincialize the West.”
Madureira’s book diverges from existing critical texts,
however, in crucial, thought-provoking ways. The specific literary
traditions compared here—Brazilian modernism, Négritude
theory and poetry, as well as Caribbean literary theory and historical
discourses in French, English, and Spanish—have not been
brought together in a single study before. In addition, the book’s
theoretical model of comparison focuses on the complexities of
colonial and postcolonial identity and of nationhood and globalization,
as well as on tyheir agonoistic engagement with Europe’s
enlightenment philosophy.
Cannibal Modernities shows us it is precisely in those
New World avant-garde movements that have been traditionally designated
as imitative that the emergence of postcoloniality resides and,
moreover, that Europe’s foundational discourses of modernity
are enabled and sustained by the very peoples and cultures that
have been relegated to the margins by modernity.
Luís Madureira is Associate Professor
in Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
His work has appeared in Luso-Brazilian Review
and the
New Centennial Review,
among other publications.