Symposium - Quarterly Journal in Modern Literatures
Volume 65, Issue 3, 2011, Pages 186-206

Exile, allegory, and the totality of the nation: Miguel ángel Asturias after the Guatemalan revolution (Conference Paper)

Davisson B.*
  • a University of California-Davis, United States

Abstract

There is little direct engagement with a discourse of exile in Asturias's essays or interviews, yet in the years following the end of the Guatemalan Revolution, which left him exiled in South America and Europe, Asturias consistently treats the loss of the nation as paramount. In the major works from this period, including Week-end en Guatemala, El Alhajadito, and Mulata de Tal, Asturias engages the crisis of national and social breakdown indirectly through allegorical modes as a response to the fall of Jacobo Árbenz, which likewise brought to a close the land reforms of the Guatemalan Revolution. For as much as the political breakdown of Guatemala emerges through the Central Intelligence Agency-sponsored Castillo Armas coup, the nation in Asturias's writings is also severed by the displacement of its citizens through exile and threatens the possibility of totality within the national sphere. In these works, Asturias recognizes this threat to the totality of the nation as he attempts to mediate the breakdown of the national structure, from the social realism of Week-end en Guatemala to the highly mythic context of Mulata de Tal. © 2011 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

Author Keywords

Exile Mulata de tal Allegorical modes Miguel Ángel Asturias Week-end en Guatemala El Alhajadito Guatemalan Revolution Nation

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-80053546593&doi=10.1080%2f00397709.2011.599724&partnerID=40&md5=fbe277084aa81249d95c7f48a44bca72

DOI: 10.1080/00397709.2011.599724
ISSN: 00397709
Original Language: English