Juan E. De Castro is an Associate Professor at Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts, The New School. He is the author of four books on Latin American literature, including Writing Revolution in Latin America: From MartÃ, to GarcÃa Márquez to Bolaño (Vanderbilt University Press, 2019).
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
â1âMariáteguiâs Reception in the English-Speaking World
â2âMariátegui in (Mostly) Latin America
â3âOn This Book
3 Mariátegui, Sorel and Myth
â1âMariátegui and Sorel
â2âThe Myth in Sorel
â3âSorel in Mariátegui
â4âRational Irrationalism
â5âIndigenous Cultures and the Myth
â6âConclusion
5 Mariáteguiâs Cosmopolitan Nationalism
â1âOne World Not Three (or Two)
â2âMaking Peru Peruvian
â3âA Brief Pre-history of Mariáteguiâs Indigenismo
â4âThinking Globally, Writing Locally
â5âThe Nation as Myth
â6âConclusion
8 Mariátegui and Argentina: Celebrating Buenos Aires, Criticising Communism
â1âBuenos Aires and Mexico City as Cultural Meridians
â2âMestizo Argentina
â3âMotley Crew
â4âDefending Marxism
â5âDefense of Heresy
â6âApologia pro vita sua
â7âAmauta/Sur
â8âConclusion
9 Mariátegui and Che: Reflections on and around Walter Sallesâs The Motorcycle Diaries
â1âHugo Pesce as Mediator
â2âFrom Mariátegui to Che
â3âThe New Man
â4âMariátegui as a Founder of Discursivity
â5âConclusion: Mariátegui, Che and Borges
10 Epilogue: A Tale of Two Quijanos
â1âThe âReencounterâ
â2âMode of Production
â3âMariáteguiâs Debates
â4âThirty Years Later
â5âMariátegui, Anti-Eurocentrism, and Modes of Production
â6âAlternative Rationality
â7âQuijano as the Paradigm
â8âConclusion: Mariátegui Unplugged
Bibliography Index
All interested in the history of Marxism, especially in Latin America and the Global South, and anyone concerned with the history of Latin American culture, especially in the twentieth century.