MI SIMÓN BOLÍVAR (1930): A NEW LITERARY PARADIGM

This article highlights how the novel by the Colombian author Fernando González Ochoa, Mi Simón Bolivar ([1930] 2002), brings a new scope to the discursive configuration of the historical character Simón Bolívar – consecrated, heroized, and sacralized by the positivist Colombian historiography in ni...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Dorado Mendez, Hugo Eliecer, de Jesus Silva, Rosangela, Fleck, Gilmei Francisco
Tipo de recurso: artículo
Estado:Versión publicada
Fecha de publicación:2022
País:Brasil
Institución:Universidade Federal do Tocantins (UFT)
Repositorio:EntreLetras
Idioma:portugués
OAI Identifier:oai:ojs2.ufnt.acessoacademico.com.br:article/13358
Acceso en línea:https://periodicos.ufnt.edu.br/index.php/entreletras/article/view/13358
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:Ressignificações do passado
Mi Simón Bolivar
Novo romance histórico latino-americano
Metaficção historiográfica
Simón Bolívar
Descripción
Sumario:This article highlights how the novel by the Colombian author Fernando González Ochoa, Mi Simón Bolivar ([1930] 2002), brings a new scope to the discursive configuration of the historical character Simón Bolívar – consecrated, heroized, and sacralized by the positivist Colombian historiography in nineteenth-century romantic literature – to a critical re-meaning of these idealized images. The hypothesis defends that González Ochoa's oeuvre is the precursor of the eventually considered second phase of the historical novel's trajectory. The said phase is composed of the modalities of the new Latin American historical novel and the historiographical metafiction. Anchored in assumptions by Aínsa (1991), Menton (1993), and Fleck (2017), the paper suggests how González Ochoa's novel precedes characteristics found in the critical modality of the new Latin American historical novel. Thus, when employing parody, carnivalesque, intertextualities, and metanarrative features. Therefore, the article upholds that this novel opened one of the most substantive paths of re-meaning the past in Latin America, a path to decolonizing the human being and the knowledge together with the effective practice of decolonial actions.