Fr. 235.00

Literature and Society in the Chilean Post-Transition - The Politics of Diamela Eltits Narrative Form

English · Hardback

Will be released 31.12.2025

Description

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This book offers a comprehensive exploration of Diamela Eltit's recent novels, highlighting how her experimental narratives engage with Chile's evolving social and political landscape.
Moving beyond postcolonial and postmodernist readings, the book proposes a new methodological framework that situates Eltit as a central figure in Chilean post-transition-to-democracy literature. Through careful analysis, the study demonstrates how her literary techniques challenge entrenched power structures, giving voice to those marginalized by systemic inequalities. Richly contextualized, the book connects literary innovation with the broader sociopolitical currents shaping contemporary Chile, from the lingering effects of dictatorship-era neoliberal policies to the subtle reawakening of civic engagement.
Balancing rigorous literary scholarship with clear, engaging explanations, Literature and Society in the Chilean Post-Transition will berelevant to students, academics, and anyone intrigued by the intersection of literature, politics, and social change. This work illuminates Eltit's continuing influence as a writer who bridges aesthetic experimentation with profound social critique.


List of contents










Introduction: Toward a Post-Transition Reading in Diamela Eltit's Recent Narrative Fiction. 1. A Failed Link between Chilean Workers' Subversive Past and Submissive Present in Diamela Eltit's Mano de obra, . Female Domestic Labour in Mano de obra's Contemporary Forms of Community Relations, 3. Oppression and Resistance Through Narrative Form: La población in Fuerzas especiales, 4. 5. Insurgent Form: Literature, Memory and Resistance in Falla humana, Conclusions, Index


About the author










Denisse Lazo is a Chilean-born and raised Lecturer in Hispanic Studies at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom. She has published extensively on the work of Chilean author Diamela Eltit, with special interest in how her technical choices contribute to the positioning of a political discourse in a context of resistance against neoliberalism.


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