Voices, Visions, and a New Reality

Mexican Fiction Since 1970

J. Ann Duncan has written a lucid, informative and distinctive work, whose scope is captured effectively in the title. Within the very rich field of Mexican 'post-boom' narrative, she focuses on those writers whose prose, as the title intimates, is innovative and experimental, whose work 'widens our definition of literature.' The writers to whom chapters are dedicated are Jose Emilio Pacheco (1939), Carlos Montemayer (1947), Humberto Guzman (1948), Esther Seligson (1942), Antonio Delgado (1941), and Jesus Gardea (1939).
ReseƱas

This book introduces to a larger audience the work of a group of Mexican writers whose work reflects the stimulus of the “boom” of the 1960s, especially in the experimental nueva novella.

Duncan views the work of six writers in the context of more well known writers of the period (Ruflo, Fuentes, and Del Paso), and concludes with a chapter on other recent innovators in Mexican literature. Despite their diversity, these texts share many common features, and unlike social realism, the works are not openly political, but at the same time they question assumptions about reality itself-and the relation of fiction to truth.

278 Pages, 6 x 9 in.

April, 1986

isbn : 9780822985655

about the author

J. Ann Duncan

J. Ann Duncan (1940-1989) was fellow and director of studies at Newnham College, Cambridge.

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J. Ann Duncan