The Death of the Storyteller and the Poetics of (Un)Containment: Juan Rulfo's <em>El llano en llamas</em>
Author(s) -
Lucy Bell
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
the modern language review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.108
H-Index - 11
eISSN - 2222-4319
pISSN - 0026-7937
DOI - 10.5699/modelangrevi.107.3.0815
Subject(s) - transculturation , poetics , narrative , storytelling , literature , art , fragmentation (computing) , history , humanities , anthropology , poetry , sociology , computer science , operating system
Critics have often read Juan Rulfo's El Llano en llamas (1953) as a return to the oral storytelling tradition. My contention, however, is that his short stories constitute an eminently modern break from cultural, narrative tradition—or what Ángel Rama has termed transculturation. I first explore how the death of the storyteller, prophesied by Walter Benjamin (1936), is staged within Rulfo's stories; and second, how Rulfo uses fragmentation as a literary device, which in turn potentiates further transculturative processes. I argue that it is in the ruins of traditional narrative that new meanings, stories, and relations emerge
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