Anderson cites Spanish critic Federico de Onis as the originator, in the context of considering Spanish/Latin American modernism
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Replying to @HPluckrose
I haven't read de Onis, but Anderson suggests that Peruvian 'modernismo' entailed a particular declaration of cultural independence from...
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Replying to @ianpacemain
Is he cited by Judith Butler or Kimberle Crenshaw or Edward Said or anyone significant to the academic shift I'm talking about?
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Replying to @HPluckrose
Not to my knowledge. But that isn't necessarily the point. There are many intermediary figures between de Onis and Lyotard.
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Replying to @ianpacemain
It's mine tho. I'm working backwards from the problems we're facing now to the source & the shift in the academic left.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
But I'm not so sure you can locate a single source in that way. And so many in that tradition have rarely read Lyotard properly.
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Replying to @ianpacemain @HPluckrose
I did read somewhere (but haven't seen it confirmed) that Lyotard violently disowned that book. The bit so many miss is when he points....
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He disowned his most famous work?
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Replying to @HPluckrose
I once read an apparent quote from him to that effect, but as I say, I haven't seen it confirmed in a reliable source yet.
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