Lizardi and the Birth of the Novel in Spanish America
by Nancy Vogeley
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Nancy Vogeley examines the emergence of the novel in Mexico at the conclusion of Spain's 300 years of colonial rule. Acknowledged as Spanish America's first novelist, José Joaquín Fernández de Lizardi introduced the genre into Mexico during its war of independence. His novel
El Periquillo Sarniento, published in 1816, became the symbol of new nationhood, and his commentary on social issues contributed to the revolutionary dialogue.
Focusing on the Periquillo and three other novels by Lizardi, Vogeley analyzes these stories for their decolonizing thinking--as an innovative linguistic discourse in a setting where the Inquisition and colonial tradition controlled production. She argues that Lizardi's satiric portrayal of ugly contemporary realities forced readers away from the text, and thus away from blind acceptance of authority and the mechanical repetition of words. She concludes that the birth of the novel came with the death of the catechism.
Nancy Vogeley is professor emerita of Spanish at the University of San Francisco. Among her studies of early 19th-century Mexico is
La literature manuscrita: Un manuscrito inédito de poesías de José Joaquín Fernández de Lizardi, an unknown poetry manuscript by Lizardi which she has edited.
November. 368pp. 6 X 9.
16 b&w photos, notes, bibliography, index.
0-8130-2118-9 Cloth, $59.95s
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"Brilliant and succinct . . . the work is original, mature, interesting, and sure to be included in future research and teaching agendas."
-- Doris Sommer, Harvard University
"The most thorough and insightful study of Fernández de Lizardi and his era to date."
-- Harold Dana Sims, professor emeritus of history, University of Pittsburgh
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