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Antigonas Moira Fradinger (Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Yale University)

Antigonas By Moira Fradinger (Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Yale University)

Summary

Antigonas rethinks the paradigms through which we understand the presence of ancient cultural materials in former colonial territories by analysing the reimagination if the Antigone myth in the theatres of Latin America.

Antigonas Summary

Antigonas: Writing from Latin America by Moira Fradinger (Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Yale University)

Antigonas: Writing from Latin America is the first book in the English language to approach classical reception through the study of one classical fragment as it circulates throughout Latin America. This interdisciplinary research engages comparative literature, Latin American studies, classical reception, history, feminist theory, political philosophy, and theatre history. Moira Fradinger tracks the ways in which, since the early nineteenth century, fragments of Antigone's myth and tragedy have been persistently cannibalized and ruminated throughout South and Central America and the Caribbean, quilted to local dramatic forms, revealing an archive of political thought about Latin America's heterogeneous neo-colonial histories. Antigona is consistently characterized as a national mother and, as the twentieth century advances, multiplied on stage, forming female collectives, foregrounding the urgency of systemic change or staging gender politics. Through meticulous examination of classical culture in necolonial contexts, Fradinger explores ways of reading Creole texts from the geopolitical South that disrupt the colonial reading protocols that deracinate texts or lock them into locality. By historicizing Antigona plays and interpreting them with a purpose to address specific colonial legacies, the book reveals how Antigona has ceased being Greek and instead tells stories of twentieth- and twenty-first-century Latin America. Antigonas rethinks the paradigms through which we understand the presence of ancient cultural materials in former colonial territories, while illuminating an understudied continent in Anglophone reception studies.

About Moira Fradinger (Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Yale University)

Moira Fradinger is an Associate Professor in the Department of Comparative Literature at Yale University. She works on South American, Caribbean and European fiction and film; Anti-colonial and decolonial thought; classics in Latin America and the Caribbean; psychoanalytic theory, and gender studies. Fradinger recently translated six 20th-century Latin American vernacular Antigona plays into English. She is the author of Binding Violence: Literary Visions of Political Origins (2010).

Additional information

NPB9780192897091
9780192897091
0192897098
Antigonas: Writing from Latin America by Moira Fradinger (Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Yale University)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
2023-03-24
480
N/A
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