eBook

$53.00 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

From the cabinets of wonderof the Renaissance to the souvenir collections of today, selecting, accumulating, and organizing objects are practices that are central to our notions of who we are and what we value. Collecting, both private and institutional, has been instrumental in the consolidation of modern notions of the individual and of the nation, and numerous studies have discussed its complex political, social, economic, anthropological, and psychological implications. However, studies of collecting as practiced in colonized cultures are few, since the role of these cultures has usually been understood as that of purveyors of objects for the metropolitan collector.
Collecting from the Margins: Material Culture in a Latin American Context seeks to counter the historical understanding of collecting that posits the metropolis as collecting subject and the colonial or postcolonial society as supplier of collectible objects by asking instead how collecting has been practiced and understood in Latin America. Has collecting been viewed or portrayed differently in a Latin American context? Does the act of collecting, when viewed from a Latin American perspective, unsettle the way we have become accustomed to think about it? What differences, if any, arise in the activity of collecting in colonized or previously colonial societies?
Spanning the period after the independence wars until the 1980s, this collection of ten essays addresses a broad range of examples of collecting practices in Latin America. Collecting during the nineteenth century is addressed in discussions of the creation of the first national museums of Argentina and Colombia in the post-independence period, as well as in analyses of the private collections of modernistas such as Enrique Gómez Carrillo, Rubén Darío, José Asunción Silva, and Delmira Agustini at the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth. The practice of collecting in the twentieth century is discussed in analyses of the self-described revolutionary practices of Oswald de Andrade, Augusto de Campos and the films of Ruy Guerra, as well as the polemical collections of Pablo Neruda, and the unsettling collections portrayed in Gabriel García Márquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611487343
Publisher: University Press Copublishing Division
Publication date: 03/23/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 276
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

María Mercedes Andrade is associate professor of humanities and literature at the Universidad de los Andes.

Table of Contents

A Note on Translations
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction by María Mercedes Andrade
Chapter 1:Sacking the Botanical Expedition: Natural and Military History in the First Museum of Colombia by Felipe Martínez-Pinzón
Chapter 2:An “Immense Museum” or an “Immense Tomb?” War and the Rhetoric of Continuity in the Writings of Francisco Moreno by Javier Uriarte
Chapter 3: Of bayaderas, congaïs, and fumerías: “Virtual” Collecting in De Marsella á Tokio: Sensaciones de Egipto, la India, la China y el Japón, by Enrique Gómez Carrillo by Olga Vilella
Chapter 4:“That heteroclite assembly”: Collecting, Modernity, and “The Savage Mind” in De sobremesa by María Mercedes Andrade
Chapter 5:Postcards, Autographs, and Modernismo: Rubén Darío on Popular Collecting and Textual Practices by Andrew Reynolds
Chapter 6:Delmira Agustini, Gender, and the Poetics of Collecting by Shelley Garrigan
Chapter 7:“I have put all I possess at the disposal of the people’s struggle”: Pablo Neruda as Collector, Translator, and Poet by Kelly Austin
Chapter 8: Antropofagia, Bricolage, Collage: Oswald de Andrade, Augusto de Campos and the Author as Collector by Fernando Pérez Villalón
Chapter 9:From the Space of the Wunderkammer to Macondo’s Wonder Rooms: The Collection of Marvels in Cien años de soledadby Jerónimo Arellano
Chapter 10:Collecting Revisited (and Left Behind): The Treasure Chambers in Ruy Guerra’s Eréndira and Portugal S.A. by Ilka Kressner
Index
About the Contributors
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews