Examines the theory and practice of nonfiction narrative literature in twentieth-century Mexico.
Beth E. JM rgensen is Professor of Spanish at the University of Rochester. Her books include (with coeditor Ignacio Corona) The Contemporary Mexican Chronicle: Theoretical Perspectives on the Liminal Genre, also published by SUNY Press; The Writing of Elena Poniatowska: Engaging Dialogues; and a new rendition, with notes, of Mariano Azuela's The Underdogs: A Novel of the Mexican Revolution.
Acknowledgments
p. vii
Introduction
p. 1
The Distinction of Nonfiction: Toward a Theoretical Framework
p. 11
Writing the Mexican Revolution of 1910
p. 27
Living Stories, Telling Lives: Autobiographical Writings of José Vasconcelos and Maria Luisa Puga
p. 69
Life Writing from a Popular Perspective
p. 107
Chronicling Crisis: Late Twentieth-Century Manifestations of the Literature of Encounter
p. 137
Making History: Subcomandante Marcos in the Mexican Chronicle
p. 161
Conclusions: Thinking Back, Looking Ahead
p. 191
Notes
p. 201
Works Cited
p. 211
Index
p. 221
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