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Macedonio Fernandez, the Argentine Avant-Garde, and Modernity in Buenos Aires

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Book Title: The Self of the City: Macedonio Fernandez, the Argentine Avant-Garde, and Modernity in Buenos Aires
Author: Todd S. Garth
Publisher: Bucknell University Press
Description: Hardcover with dust jacket. 236 pages.
Date: 2005
Condition: Spine caps lightly bumped.
Dust Jacket: Some light shelf wear and scuffing. Light creasing along the upper edge.
Contents: Macedonio Fernández (Argentinian, 1874 - 1952) is a critical figure in modern Latin American literature, mentor to Borges and precursor to the avant-garde. The Self of the City shows Macedonio's work to be a systematic effort to "save the city" from a modernity based on the fallacy of Descartes' autonomous self. Garth dismantles the myth of Macedonio, exposing Borges's role in creating it. Comparing Macedonio's work to that of the avant-garde, he reveals how Macedonio critiques the avant-garde's continued reliance on the self. Garth examines important social and political realities in early twentieth-century Buenos Aires along with current theories on these phenomena. He concludes that Macedonio's opus rejects the modern city as paradoxical and untenable, detrimental to the sentient individual, and in need of salvation by means of a radical new poetics.
Author: Todd S. Garth
Publisher: Bucknell University Press
Description: Hardcover with dust jacket. 236 pages.
Date: 2005
Condition: Spine caps lightly bumped.
Dust Jacket: Some light shelf wear and scuffing. Light creasing along the upper edge.
Contents: Macedonio Fernández (Argentinian, 1874 - 1952) is a critical figure in modern Latin American literature, mentor to Borges and precursor to the avant-garde. The Self of the City shows Macedonio's work to be a systematic effort to "save the city" from a modernity based on the fallacy of Descartes' autonomous self. Garth dismantles the myth of Macedonio, exposing Borges's role in creating it. Comparing Macedonio's work to that of the avant-garde, he reveals how Macedonio critiques the avant-garde's continued reliance on the self. Garth examines important social and political realities in early twentieth-century Buenos Aires along with current theories on these phenomena. He concludes that Macedonio's opus rejects the modern city as paradoxical and untenable, detrimental to the sentient individual, and in need of salvation by means of a radical new poetics.