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Lomas challenges longstanding conceptions about Martí through readings of neglected texts and reinterpretations of his major essays. Against the customary view that emphasizes his strong identification with Ralph Waldo Emerson and Walt Whitman, the author demonstrates that over several years, Martí actually distanced himself from Emerson's ideas and conveyed alarm at Whitman's expansionist politics. She questions the association of Martí with pan-Americanism, pointing out that in the 1880s, the Cuban journalist warned against foreign geopolitical influence imposed through ostensibly friendly meetings and the promotion of hemispheric peace and "free" trade. Lomas finds Martí undermining racialized and sexualized representations of America in his interpretations of Buffalo Bill and other rituals of westward expansion, in his self-published translation of Helen Hunt Jackson's popular romance novel Ramona, and in his comments on writing that stereotyped Latino/a Americans as inherently unfit for self-government. With Translating Empire, Lomas recasts the contemporary practice of American studies in light of Martí's late-nineteenth-century radical decolonizing project.
Author: Laura Lomas
ISBN-10: 0822343428
ISBN-13: 9780822343424
Publisher: Duke University Press
Language: English
Published: 01/02/2009
Pages: 400
Format: Hardcover
Weight: 1.50lbs
Size: 9.40h x 6.20w x 1.20d
Award: MLA Prize - Winner
Laura Lomas is Assistant Professor of English Literature and American Studies at Rutgers University.
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