This book provides a transatlantic and interdisciplinary perspective of
dictatorships in the Hispanic World, focusing on the common strategies used to
represent and/or protest these regimes in narrative, film, poetry, essays,
theater, and visual arts.
Gender Troping and the Emergence of Bigendered Subjects in Latin American Narrative
229 pages
9 hours of reading
The book explores how gender influences national identities in post-independence Latin America, highlighting the struggles for power that challenge traditional gender roles. It discusses how writers during this era employed oppositional gender concepts to contest dominant governments, creating new male national figures to replace caudillo leaders. The fluctuating gender conceptualizations, influenced by European scientific and philosophical trends, lead to the emergence of ambiguous or androgynous male identities, deconstructing traditional binary perceptions of gender.