Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Baroque, Symbolism and Hispanic Modernity: A Benjaminian Meditation on the Construction of History
- 1 Góngora and the Colonial Body Politic: Moriscos, Amerindians and Poetry as Protest
- 2 Violence and the “Tremulous Private Body” in Lazarillo de Tormes, Fuenteovejuna, and the Soledades
- 3 Trauma, Body and Machine in Don Quijote
- 4 Góngora and Darío in Constellation: On the Poetics of Rape, Colonialism and Modernity
- 5 Pilgrimage into the Trauma of History: Continuities of Góngora in Carpentier, Rulfo and Vallejo
- 6 Signposts in a Genealogy of Post-Symbolism in Latin American Poetry
- Afterword
- Appendix I: On Mallarmé’s “Un Coup de dés”
- Appendix II: The Annales School and Maravall’s La cultura del barroco
- Works Cited
- Index
4 - Góngora and Darío in Constellation: On the Poetics of Rape, Colonialism and Modernity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2020
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Baroque, Symbolism and Hispanic Modernity: A Benjaminian Meditation on the Construction of History
- 1 Góngora and the Colonial Body Politic: Moriscos, Amerindians and Poetry as Protest
- 2 Violence and the “Tremulous Private Body” in Lazarillo de Tormes, Fuenteovejuna, and the Soledades
- 3 Trauma, Body and Machine in Don Quijote
- 4 Góngora and Darío in Constellation: On the Poetics of Rape, Colonialism and Modernity
- 5 Pilgrimage into the Trauma of History: Continuities of Góngora in Carpentier, Rulfo and Vallejo
- 6 Signposts in a Genealogy of Post-Symbolism in Latin American Poetry
- Afterword
- Appendix I: On Mallarmé’s “Un Coup de dés”
- Appendix II: The Annales School and Maravall’s La cultura del barroco
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
Ya Hugo a Grant lo dijo: “Las estrellas son vuestras”. (Apenas brilla, alzándose, el argentino sol y la estrella chilena se levanta …)
Rubén Darío, “A Roosevelt” (1904)The next three chapters will examine modern Latin American texts, moving from modernismo, through the avant-garde and Neobaroque, to Post-Symbolism in poetry. We will explore the topic of Symbolism as a marker for the impasse of modernity announced by the Baroque, beginning with the constellation between Góngora and Rubén Darío. In this chapter we will study the continuities of Góngora's poetry in Darío's famous swan poems, examining the political significance of rape imagery in the modernista appropriation of Symbolist figures. This point of constellation between Darío and Góngora, significantly, anticipates the Gongorine tricentenary.
The 1927 revival of Luis de Góngora is an important conjuncture in the modern appropriation of the poet's work, but our appreciation of the event should not obscure the fact that the Gongorine resurgence on the peninsula had in fact deeper roots in the poetry of Latin America. As Roberto González Echevarría has pointed out, Góngora's “rediscovery” actually began across the Atlantic in the work of modernista poets José Martí and Rubén Darío and the essayist Alfonso Reyes (Celestina's Brood 195). Rubén Darío's participation in French Symbolist circles, together with his exercises in imitation of Golden Age models, well equipped him to contribute to the revival of Góngora in advance of the tricentenary, most notably in his famous “Trébol” sonnets (272–74).
I do not, however, propose to focus on this specific case of Darío's selfconscious poetic celebration of Góngora; rather, I will attempt to demonstrate how a more general understanding of ideological and aesthetic continuities in Darío's work can provide valuable opportunities for the contextualization of Góngora's poetry within the evolution of the modern.
Several parallels emerge in comparing the circumstances and concerns of Góngora and Darío. These include a parallel historical positioning at moments in the rise of the city, leading to an aesthetic parallel in the cultivation of the pastoral mode, a similar problematic of subjectivity in the context of parallel avant-garde cultures, a secularization and eroticization of religious discourse, a similar display of proliferation of cultural artifacts, of pastiche, virtuosity and the cultivation of language and the writing process.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Spanish Baroque and Latin American Literary ModernityWriting in Constellation, pp. 87 - 102Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2021