Poverty and Antitheatricality argues that many major analytical approaches today misunderstand the problem of poverty by emphasizing its status as an experience. These experiential models transform poverty from a specific socioeconomic status lived in a particular historical sequence into a transhistorical presence of marginality that is not only inevitable but necessary. Embedded in capitalist, socialist, and populist forms of socioeconomic organization, these models paradoxically suggest that if we want to have a world free of poverty, we must always have the poor and their experience of formlessness. Taking up the paired terms—form and formlessness—Stephen Buttes demonstrates how they sustain not only debates about poverty and its political role within modernity but also the idea of the work of art within the history of modernism. Offering critiques of critical theory alongside new readings of both canonical and little-studied Latin American authors and artists, Poverty and Antitheatricality makes a compelling case that understanding the kind of problem the work of art is opens up overlooked but essential pathways to understanding poverty and the kind of problem it is.
"Buttes argues that poverty is more than just a result of economic exploitation and that other factors—social, political, and cultural—have a role to play. . . . Recommended."
"Engaging and polemical, Buttes's study shows the inadequacy of contemporary theories to understand poverty in terms of exploitation and dispossession, instead turning it into a second nature from which it is impossible to escape."
"Buttes provides a compelling analysis of why experiential and transhistorical accounts of poverty are inadequate and how Latin American literature and film can help us move beyond them."
Introduction
1: Managing to Get By: Lizardi, Cantinflas, and the Problem of Horizontalism
2: Icons of the Everyday: Calculating Poverty in Pablo Neruda’s Odas elementales
3: The Afterlife of Mexico, 1968: Posthegemony and Its Antitheatrical Alternatives
4: Photography and Borges’s Landscapes of Poverty
Conclusion
Acknowledgements Notes Works Cited Index
STEPHEN BUTTESis an associate professor of Spanish at Purdue University Fort Wayne. He is a coeditor of Pobreza y precariedad en el imaginario latinoamericano del siglo XXI.
Please complete your information below to login.
Sign In
Create New Account