Invisible Geographies of Globalization: Bolaño, Almada and Zuñiga

Authors

  • Daniuska González González Universidad de Playa Ancha (Chile)
  • Alexis Candia-Cáceres Universidad de Playa Ancha (Chile)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7764/ANALESLITCHI.28.04

Keywords:

Roberto Bolaño, Selva Almada, Diego zúñiga, hispanoamerican Literature, Literary Cri- ticism, XX-XXI century

Abstract

Los sinsabores del verdadero policía (2011), Chicas Muertas (2014), and Racimo (2014),show the ra- vages of globalization in border towns or provinces of Mexico, Argentina, and Chile. Roberto Bolaño, Selva Almada, and Diego Zúñiga reflect the efects of industrialization in areas damaged by economic exploitation and violence, creating thus regions traversed by horror. Indeed, this horror is symbolized by the bodies of mutilated women that appear from the northern border of Mexico to the center of Argentine territory. To show this, a comparative analysis based on various theoretical resources allow to establish that these books constitute a geography of horror

Author Biographies

Daniuska González González, Universidad de Playa Ancha (Chile)

Centro de Estudios Avanzados (CEA)

Alexis Candia-Cáceres, Universidad de Playa Ancha (Chile)

Centro de Estudios Avanzados (CEA)

Published

2017-06-30

How to Cite

Daniuska González González, & Alexis Candia-Cáceres. (2017). Invisible Geographies of Globalization: Bolaño, Almada and Zuñiga. Anales De Literatura Chilena, (28), 79–94. https://doi.org/10.7764/ANALESLITCHI.28.04

Issue

Section

ARTICULOS