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Latin American Boom
A major literary, editorial, and cultural phenomenon mainly in the 1960s–1970s when Latin American fiction gained unusual international circulation and prestige.
Convergence (in the Boom)
The idea that the Boom was not a single “school” with fixed rules but a meeting point of new narrative techniques, publishing networks, and historical debates.
International visibility
A key aspect of the Boom marked by global readership, prizes, translations, and strong international marketing by publishers.
Aesthetic experimentation
The Boom’s tendency to push narrative limits through nonlinearity, ambiguity, shifting perspectives, mixed registers, and open endings.
Historical conversation
The Boom’s engagement with Latin America’s modernization, inequality, Cold War tensions, and debates over cultural identity and influence.
Magical realism
A narrative mode that integrates extraordinary events into an otherwise realistic tone, treating the unusual as everyday rather than shocking.
Not-all-Boom-is-magical-realism
A correction of a common misconception: many Boom texts do not use magical realism, and magical elements can appear outside the Boom.
Cuban Revolution (1959)
A major political event that strongly shaped the intellectual climate of the period and debates about justice and political change.
Military dictatorships
Authoritarian regimes present in many Latin American countries during the Boom era, influencing writers’ political concerns and themes.
Guerrilla movements
Insurgent armed groups that emerged in parts of Latin America, part of the broader political and social upheaval surrounding the Boom.
Foreign intervention
External political/economic influence (often associated with the U.S. in common historical readings) that Boom writers frequently critique.
Cultural imperialism
The dominance of one culture’s values, media, or aesthetics over another; a concern in Boom-era debates about “the local” vs “the imported.”
Expansion of education
A social condition that widened the reading public and helped create new generations of engaged literary readers during the Boom.
Growth of the middle class
A demographic shift that increased the size of the reading public and supported a stronger market for literature.
Transnational publishing networks
International systems of editors, publishers, prizes, and translation channels that helped Boom writers circulate globally.
Feedback loop (Boom mechanism)
The self-reinforcing cycle in which more readership led to more publication/translation, which increased expectations of innovation.
Literary magazines (revistas literarias)
Periodicals that supported debate and promoted Latin American writing, helping sustain Boom-era cultural conversation.
Cultural icon
A writer whose public status expands beyond literature into global cultural symbolism, as happened to several Boom authors.
Nobel Prize in Literature (1982)
The prize awarded to Gabriel GarcĂa Márquez, often cited as a milestone of global recognition for Latin American literature.
Postcolonial studies
An academic field shaped in part by Boom-era challenges to Eurocentric literary canons and by attention to colonial legacies.
World literature
A framework for reading texts across borders and translation, strengthened by the Boom’s global reception and influence.
Crystallizes a reading mode
The idea that the Boom consolidated a reader’s expectation of ambiguity, structural play, and symbolic layers rather than “inventing” experimentation from nothing.
Modernism (European/North American)
Earlier literary movements that influenced Boom experimentation through fragmentation, interiority, and challenges to traditional realism.
Regionalism
A prior Latin American tendency emphasizing local settings (often rural) and regional realities, contrasted with the Boom’s broader formal risks.
Social realism
A movement focused on explicit depiction of social problems; the Boom often kept political concerns while increasing formal complexity.
Post-Boom
Later trends that reacted to perceived Boom elitism by using more accessible, often more urban narratives and everyday speech.
McOndo
A 1990s movement emphasizing contemporary urban life, technology, consumerism, and globalization as a counterpoint to “Macondo” expectations.
Ambiguity
A technique where the text sustains multiple plausible interpretations without fully resolving them.
Competing realities
A Boom effect where two versions of “what is real” conflict, forcing the reader to interpret signals in the narration.
Nonlinear time
Narrative time that breaks chronological order through flashbacks, anticipations, loops, and blurred transitions.
Blurred transitions
Moments where the text does not clearly mark when or how it shifts scenes or realities, increasing uncertainty.
Narrative authority
The question of who controls the story’s “truth” and how voice, perspective, and structure influence what counts as real.
Collective narrator
A narrative voice representing a community (“we”) that observes, judges, and constructs meaning as a group.
Frame narrative
A structure in which one story encloses another (e.g., an outer narrator presenting a diary, letter, or testimony).
Focalization
The lens through which events are perceived; a narrator may seem external while closely aligned with a character’s consciousness.
Shifting perspectives
Changes in point of view that require the reader to reconstruct events from multiple angles.
Stream of consciousness
A technique that represents the continuous flow of a character’s thoughts and sensations, often producing intimacy and disorientation.
The fantastic
A mode that generates doubt about whether events have a rational explanation or require the supernatural.
The marvelous
A mode that accepts the supernatural as stable and normal within the story’s world, rather than questioning it.
Reading contract (in magical realism)
An implicit agreement where the reader accepts extraordinary elements because the narrative treats them as ordinary, enabling symbolic meaning.
Material symbolism
The use of concrete objects, bodies, or repeated elements (water, stone, blood) to organize and deepen meaning across a text.
Intertextuality
A text’s dialogue with other texts or traditions—myths, biblical/classical stories, or earlier literature—to create layered meaning.
Myth (as narrative force)
A story-pattern that returns or competes with modern explanations, offering an alternative language for interpreting reality and history.
“La noche boca arriba”
Julio Cortázar’s story that alternates a modern hospital reality with a Mesoamerican pursuit/sacrifice reality, culminating in a destabilizing inversion.
Sensory imagery as a switch
In Cortázar, details like smell, heat, darkness, and bodily position function as bridges that trigger shifts between realities.
Structural irony (Cortázar)
A design where the reader believes the mechanism is dream/waking, but the ending reorganizes the hierarchy of realities.
“El ahogado más hermoso del mundo”
GarcĂa Márquez’s story where a coastal community mythologizes an enormous drowned man, transforming collective identity and the imagined space of the town.
Myth in formation
A process where a community names, imagines, and integrates an event/person into shared meaning—more important than verifying factual origins.
“Chac Mool”
Carlos Fuentes’s story told through a frame and a diary about Filiberto and a Chac Mool figure, linking the return of the past to critique of modern appropriation.
Water motif (in “Chac Mool”)
A recurring element that invades domestic space and marks shifts in power, suggesting the return of repressed history and the limits of modern control.