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| Título: | IRELAND AND LATIN AMERICA: A CULTURAL HISTORY |
| Autores: | Murray, Edmundo |
| Palavras Chave: | Cultural History Latin America Ireland |
| Data de Emissão: | Jun-2010 |
| Editora: | Faculty of Arts Romanisches Seminar University of Zurich |
| Relatório da Série N.º: | 001;455 |
| Resumo: | According to Declan Kiberd, “postcolonial writing does not begin only when the occupier
withdraws: rather it is initiated at that very moment when a native writer formulates a text
committed to cultural resistance.” The Irish in Latin America – a continent emerging from
indigenous cultures, colonisation, and migrations – may be regarded as colonised in Ireland
and as colonisers in their new home. They are a counterexample to the standard pattern of
identities in the major English-speaking destinations of the Irish Diaspora. Using literary
sources, the press, correspondence, music, sports, and other cultural representations, in this
thesis I search the attitudes and shared values signifying identities among the immigrants and
their families. Their fragmentary and wide-ranging cultures provide a rich context to study the
protean process of adaptation to, or rejection of, the new countries. Evolving from oppressed
to oppressors, the Irish in Latin America swiftly became ingleses. Subsequently, in order to
join the local middle classes they became vaqueros, llaneros, huasos, and gauchos so they
could show signs of their effective integration to the native culture, as seen by the Latin
American elites. Eventually, some Irish groups separated from the English mainstream culture
and shaped their own community negotiating among Irishness, Englishness, and local
identities in Brazil, Uruguay, Peru, Cuba, and other places in the region. These identities were
not only unmoored in the emigrants’ minds but also manoeuvred by the political needs of
community and religious leaders. After reviewing the major steps and patterns of Irish
migration to Latin America, the thesis analyses texts from selected works, offers a version of
how the settlers became Latin Americans or not, and elucidates the processes by which a new
Irish-Latin American hybrid was created. |
| Descrição: | This research is about the cultural representations of Irish settlers in Latin America and the
Caribbean. 1 Literary, archival, and critical sources were studied seeking to identify shared
values and attitudes among the Irish and their families in Latin America. The diversity of
cultures has been considered, not only in Ireland and Latin America, but also among different
social groups of Irish emigrants, as well as in the diverse receiving societies. This thesis is
based on my examination of Irish-Latin American literature and cultural representations, and
draws on research conducted in Irish Studies and Latin American Studies.
The case of the Irish in Latin America is worth studying for three main reasons. Common
to other human displacements, the migrants were the point of contact between different
cultures, languages, and sets of values. They came from a colonised territory – in the heart of
the British Empire – but when they arrived in a space perceived as empty and wild, scarcely
populated by peoples who were ethnically and culturally different from their previous English
masters, the Irish became colonisers and occasionally oppressors themselves. And third,
through generations the Irish settlers and their families experienced a distinctive process of
identification, by which they became English, then Latin Americans, and, eventually, Irish. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/246 |
| Aparece nas Coleções: | Teses de Doutoramento
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