Lima Fundada: Identity Politics in a Providential Epic of Conquest
The 1732 epic poem chronicles the history of cultural-political formations and affirms Creole identity through an architecture of conquest influenced by French neoclassicism and revisionist Bourbon precepts about history. Acknowledging epic models of conquerors, Peralta shifts emphasis from a European to a Creole interpretation of the conquest, where it is defined by governance, service and development over arms, and by a concept of political discourse authorizing religious discourse (conquest of providentialism and a invitation to conquest). Summer research to write a introductory essay leading to publication of the scarce poem will center Peralta within the canon of Latin American letters by refocusing his unique Creole-identity politics.
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Project fields:
Spanish Literature
Program:
Summer Stipends
Division:
Research Programs
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Totals:
$5,000 (approved) $5,000 (awarded)
Grant period:
6/1/2003 – 7/31/2003
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