History, poetry, and politics in Gaspar de Villagra's "History of New Mexico"
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2012Materia/s Unesco
Resumen
Gaspar de Villagra's Historia de la nveva Mexico (1610) has lingered on the margins of U.S. literary history for centuries. Embraced as a source of historical information, the poem was seldom seen as a work of literary merit. In the past four decades, however, critics of Chicano/a literature have paved the way for a reinterpretation of the poem that places Villagra's Historia at the onset of Chicano/a letters. But reclaiming the poem means addressing its politics as well. In this article, I analyze the ways in which history, poetry, and politics are intertwined in Villagra's Historia in ways that maximize ambiguity, open-endedness, and contradiction.
Gaspar de Villagra's Historia de la nveva Mexico (1610) has lingered on the margins of U.S. literary history for centuries. Embraced as a source of historical information, the poem was seldom seen as a work of literary merit. In the past four decades, however, critics of Chicano/a literature have paved the way for a reinterpretation of the poem that places Villagra's Historia at the onset of Chicano/a letters. But reclaiming the poem means addressing its politics as well. In this article, I analyze the ways in which history, poetry, and politics are intertwined in Villagra's Historia in ways that maximize ambiguity, open-endedness, and contradiction.





