Poetry, politics and activism
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7203/KAM.11.11354Keywords:
Literatura, lenguaje, política, poesía, crítica, activismoAbstract
The essay starts with the analysis of the novel “Leviatán” by Paul Auster to reconstruct a counterpoint between two ways of conceiving a critical and politically committed literary practice, linked to different assumptions about the author, the language and the reader. From the analysis of these conceptions, some questions are formulated that allow to critically elucidate the implications of each position.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
-
Abstract862
-
ARTÍCULO (Español)502
Issue
Section
License
This journal provides an immediate free access to the content on the principle that freely make investigation available to the public, which promotes an increased global knowledge exchange.
Unless otherwise indicated, texts published in this journal are under the license Attribution-NonComercial 4.0 by Creative Commons. These texts may be copied, distributed and publicly communicated whenever the publication’s author and title are quoted and whenever they are not used for commercial purposes. In any case, intellectual property of the articles and its potential economic rights entirely belong to its authors.
The full license can be consulted on https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/. We encourage authors to disseminate papers published in Kamchatka. Journal of cultural analysis electronically, in institutional digital repository or in their websites.