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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Latin American Literature > Spanish American literature
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Spanish American literature, Latin American Literature

Related Category: Latin American Literature

The history of Spanish American literature begins with the writings of the explorers, soldiers, and missionaries who participated in the conquest of the New World. Their writings, eyewitness accounts of the discovery, the conquest, the existing civilizations, and the natural wonders of the flora and fauna, form the literature of the early colonial period. These chronicles, letters, histories, religious pieces, and epic poems are the vibrant and fascinating expression of those who fought for church, crown, and gold.

The letters of Christopher Columbus to Ferdinand V and Isabella I and those of HernAn CortEs, the conqueror of Mexico, to Charles V are among the classics of this period. Bernal DIaz del Castillo, one of the soldiers of CortEs, wrote a remarkable history of the conquest of Mexico, and the history by the Dominican friar BartolomE de Las Casas of the destruction of the Indies made him the "apostle of the Indians" and the author of the "black legend" of Spain.

Early poetry includes Chile's epic poem, La Araucana (1569–89; tr. 1945) by Alonso de Ercilla y ZUniga, a soldier who described the conflict between the Spaniards and the Araucanians of Chile. The epic tradition was continued by Diego de Hajeda and Bernardo de Balbuena. Among the first of those born in the New World to write about it, the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega described the history of the Incas and of Peru.

With the growth of Spanish colonial society in America came the concomitant growth of literary circles, especially in the viceregal capitals of Mexico City and Lima. The writings of the time were imitative of 17th-century Spanish literature. Several notable figures were Juan Ruiz de AlarcOn, the Mexican-born playwright, generally considered one of the great Spanish dramatists; Juana InEs de la Cruz, Mexican nun, feminist, and intellectual, known for her lyric poetry, plays, and prose; and the Peruvian Juan del Valle y Caviedes, known for his satiric poetry and sharp wit.



The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.



Topics that might be of interest to you:

Juan Ruiz de AlarcOn
Ciro AlegrIa
Araucanians
GermAn Arciniegas
Alcides Arguedas
Miguel Angel Asturias
Mariano Azuela
Eduardo Barrios
AndrEs Bello
Alberto Blest Gana
SimOn BolIvar
Jorge Luis Borges
Brazilian literature
Alejo Carpentier
JuliAn del Casal
JosE Santos Chocano
Christopher Columbus
Julio CortAzar
HernAn CortEs
RubEn DarIo
Bernal DIaz del Castillo
Esteban EcheverrIa
Alonso de Ercilla y ZUniga
JosE JoaquIn FernAndez de Lizardi
Carlos Fuentes
ROmulo Gallegos
Gabriel GarcIa MArquez
Garcilaso de la Vega, Peruvian historian
gaucho
Manuel GonzAlez Prada
Ricardo GUiraldes
Manuel GutiErrez NAjera
MartIn Luis GuzmAn
JosE MarIa Heredia
JosE HernAndez
Julio Herrera y Reissig
Eugenio MarIa de Hostos
Vicente Huidobro
Juana de Ibarbourou
Jorge Icaza
Jorge Isaacs
Juana InEs de la Cruz
BartolomE de Las Casas
Leopoldo Lugones
magic realism
Eduardo Mallea
JosE MArmol
JosE MartI
Mexico, country, North America
Gabriela Mistral
modernismo
Juan Montalvo
Pablo Neruda
Amado Nervo
JosE Joaquin Olmedo
Ricardo Palma
Portuguese literature
Horacio Quiroga
Alfonso Reyes
JosE Eustasio Rivera
JosE Enrique RodO
romanticism
Juan Rulfo
Ernesto SAbato
Domingo Faustino Sarmiento
JosE AsunciOn Silva
Spanish literature
Uruguay, country, South America
Guillermo Valencia
CEsar Vallejo
Mario Vargas Llosa
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Related Categories:

Literature and the Arts > Literature in Other Modern Languages


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