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“Tillis’s book represents an important continuation to the very vital
scholarship of critics who have promoted and substantiated the perennial
place of Zapata Olivella in Colombian, Latin American, and world
letters.”
—James J. Davis
Manuel Zapata Olivella and the “Darkening” of Latin American Literature
is an examination of the fictional work of one of Latin America’s
most prolific, yet overlooked, writers. Born in Colombia to parents of
mixed ancestry, Zapata Olivella uses his novels to explore the plight of
the downtrodden in his nation and by extension the experience of blacks
in other parts of the Americas. Author Antonio D. Tillis offers a
critical examination of Zapata Olivella’s major works of fiction from
the 1940s to the present, including Tierra mojada (1947);
Pasión vagabunda (1949); He visto la noche (1953); La
Calle 10 (1960); En Chimá nace un santo (1963); Las claves
mágicas de América (1989); and Hemingway, el cazador de la muerte
(1993).
Tillis
focuses on the development of the “black aesthetic” in Zapata Olivella’s
stories, in which the circumstances of the people of African heritage
are centered in the narrative discourse. Tillis also traces Zapata
Olivella’s novelistic effort to incorporate the Africa-descended subject
into the literature of Latin America. A critical look at the placement
of Afro–Latin American protagonists reveals the sociopolitical and
historical challenges of citizenship and community. In addition, this
study explores tenets of postcolonial and postmodern thought such as
place, displacement, marginalization, historiographic metafiction, and
chronological disjuncture in relation to Zapata Olivella’s fiction.
Tillis concludes that the novelistic trajectory of this Afro-Colombian
writer is one that brings into literary history an often overlooked
subject: the disenfranchised citizen of African ancestry.
By expanding
and updating the current scholarship on Zapata Olivella, Tillis leads us
to new contexts for and interpretations of this author’s work. This
analysis will be welcomed by readers who are just beginning to discover
the writings of Zapata Olivella, and its new approach to those writings
will be appreciated by scholars who are already familiar with his
works.
About the Author
Antonio D. Tillis is Assistant Professor
of Foreign Languages and Literatures and African American Studies at
Purdue University.
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