Current Mapuche-Huilliche Discourse and Poetics: Generational Shift and Territorial Difference

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Abstract

The ethnic-cultural (re)naissance in Chile is currently undergoing an expansion as well as a diversification along lines of minority cultures and gender differentiations. Since the explosion onto the Chilean literary landscape, in 1989, of the bilingual poet Leonel Lienlaf Lienlaf, Mapuche-Huilliche writers have come into the spotlight of academia, State and popular culture critics. Among other current distinctions, a younger generation of huilliche poets are distinguishing themselves through a hybrid, reflexive, and literary expressiveness. In opposition to the poetry that is tied to indigenous cultural institutions, orality, and traditional rural forms of existence, these poets thrive and strive for a pluricultural and complex way of living and expressing themselves. This work explores a selection of poets and their individual circumstances in an attempt to delineate the differences, and profile a greater cultural change that is coming about in south Chile.

Article Details




James Parck

Author Biography

James Parck, Universidad de Los Lagos

Universidad de Los Lagos
Centro de Estudios del Desarrollo
Local y Regional (CEDER)
Lord Cochrane 1225, Osorno
Chile

Parck, J. (2019). Current Mapuche-Huilliche Discourse and Poetics: Generational Shift and Territorial Difference. ALPHA: Revista De Artes, Letras Y Filosofía, 1(24), 139-162. Retrieved from https://revistaalpha.ulagos.cl/index.php/alpha/article/view/1972

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