This America We Dream of
Rodo and "Ariel" One Hundred Years on
9781900039369
Distributed for University of London Press
This America We Dream of
Rodo and "Ariel" One Hundred Years on
Jose Enrique Rodo (1871-1917) is a key figure in the history of Latin American culture. His best known work is ’Ariel’, an influential essay published a hundred years ago in his native Montevideo. Partly inspired by Spain’s defeat over Cuba and Puerto Rico two years earlier, ’Ariel’ is the subcontinent’s foremost call for a concerted Latin Americanism to counter the cultural impact of the United States, and has influenced later interpretations of that relationship. The essays gathered in this volume provide a complex view of Rodo and make a significant contribution to the current renewal of interest in the work of a writer whose message is likely to need further reinterpreting efforts well into the second centenary of ’Ariel’. Contributors include: Iain A.D. Stewart, University of St. Andrews; Jason Wison, University College, London; Gordon Brotherston, Stanford University; Stephen M. Hart, University College, London; Stephen G.H. Roberts, University of Nottingham.
115 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2001
Institute of Latin American Studies
Literature and Literary Criticism: General Criticism and Critical Theory
Political Science: Political and Social Theory

Table of Contents
Introduction Gustavo San Roman 1. Rodo, the Generation of 1837 and Juan Carlos Gomez: Iain A. D. Stewart 2. Replay of Plato: Rodo, Dario and Poetry Jason Wilson 3. Rodo Views his Continent Gordon Brotherston 4. Rodo and Marti Stephen M. Hart 5. The Reception of Ariel in Spain: Rodo, Unamuno and the Emergence of the Modern Intellectual Stephen G. H. Roberts 6. Rodo in the United Kingdom, or the Power of an Eloquent Summary Gustavo San Roman
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