Book contents
- Nazism, the Second World War and the Holocaust in Contemporary Latin American Fiction
- Nazism, the Second World War and the Holocaust in Contemporary Latin American Fiction
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Nazism as Allegory in Argentine Fiction: From Dictatorship to Neoliberalism in El comienzo de la primavera by Patricio Pron and Wakolda by Lucía Puenzo
- Chapter 2 Nazism and Borges: Contemporary Re-readings by Roberto Bolaño and Marcos Peres
- Chapter 3 Myth Interrupted: Identity and the Absence of Nation in En busca de Klingsor by Jorge Volpi and Amphitryon by Ignacio Padilla
- Chapter 4 Sovereignty, Democracy and ‘Nonselfsufficiency’ through Touch in Los informantes by Juan Gabriel Vásquez and Diário da Queda by Michel Laub
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 1 - Nazism as Allegory in Argentine Fiction: From Dictatorship to Neoliberalism in El comienzo de la primavera by Patricio Pron and Wakolda by Lucía Puenzo
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 June 2022
- Nazism, the Second World War and the Holocaust in Contemporary Latin American Fiction
- Nazism, the Second World War and the Holocaust in Contemporary Latin American Fiction
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Nazism as Allegory in Argentine Fiction: From Dictatorship to Neoliberalism in El comienzo de la primavera by Patricio Pron and Wakolda by Lucía Puenzo
- Chapter 2 Nazism and Borges: Contemporary Re-readings by Roberto Bolaño and Marcos Peres
- Chapter 3 Myth Interrupted: Identity and the Absence of Nation in En busca de Klingsor by Jorge Volpi and Amphitryon by Ignacio Padilla
- Chapter 4 Sovereignty, Democracy and ‘Nonselfsufficiency’ through Touch in Los informantes by Juan Gabriel Vásquez and Diário da Queda by Michel Laub
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Chapter 1 compares two contemporary Argentine novels that deal with Nazism in allegorical ways. Patricio Pron’s El comienzo de la primavera establishes a dialogue between the German and Argentine post-dictatorship contexts. In doing so, Pron highlights the inevitable insufficiency of justice in relation to dictatorship crimes, or that which Brett Levinson calls ‘radical injustice’. The novel’s melancholic register and parallels between two distinct historical moments lend themselves to an examination with reference to Walter Benjamin’s theory of allegory. In Wakolda, Lucía Puenzo examines the activities of Josef Mengele in Argentina but, contrary to Pron, rejects parallels with events related to the dictatorship or post-dictatorship. Instead, she foregrounds the foundational reliance of the Argentine nation on forms of ‘immunization’ (Esposito) and ‘necropolitics’ (Mbembe): the exploitative labour of a racialized mass that are rhetorically and materially excluded from the benefits of being ‘Argentine’ in both the past and the present.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022