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(2017) Imperialism and the wider atlantic, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Translocal misreadings
Eugeni d'Ors in Latin America and transatlantic studies today
Tania Gentic
pp. 207-235
Gentic examines the role transatlantic intellectual discussions played in producing an idea of Latin American identity before and during Eugeni d"Ors's visit to Argentina in 1921. She draws attention to what she calls the "planes of legibility" that allowed local readers to presume ideas from different national contexts shared universalizable philosophical ideals that were politically translocal. This process of thought, she argues, depends on readings that leave out, sublate, or transcend the material realities of local place, misplacing ideas so they can become legible to readers in other places. Put another way, she suggests that it is the epistemological movement from a specific context to an idea as placeless that makes the local legible elsewhere, a problem that remains fundamental to how critics approach transatlantic studies today.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-58208-5_10
Full citation:
Gentic, T. (2017)., Translocal misreadings: Eugeni d'Ors in Latin America and transatlantic studies today, in T. Gentic & F. Larubia-Prado (eds.), Imperialism and the wider atlantic, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 207-235.