ABSTRACT

A Culture of Its Own: Taking Latin America Seriously presents Mark Falcoff's essays on the region. Many of them are contentious; none of them are dull. He ranges from bilingualism to the cult of Garcia Lorca, from U.S.-Cuban relations to Chile's curious love affair with Germany. On more than one occasion, Falcoff takes aim at American journalism and scholarship, both of which, he argues, have all too often produced a fantasy version of Latin America which reflects our own national narcissism rather than genuine curiosity about the other. Latin America, Falcoff argues, is not merely a geographical extension of the United States, or a kind of downmarket version of the American Southwest. It is a culture all its own, with its own historical memory, sensibility, and worldview. Its achievements -and its miseries-are also its own, not the end-product of policies made by the Pentagon, Wall Street, or the CIA.

Falcoff writes about the region with originality, iconoclastic wit, and distinctive literary flair. His volume will interest Latin American specialists, diplomats, and journalists as well as those general readers who think they are not interested in Latin America-or who only suspect they might be, but don't know quite where to start.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part I|62 pages

Ideas and Ideologies

chapter 2|12 pages

Beyond Bilingualism

chapter 3|12 pages

The Only Hope for Latin America

chapter 4|16 pages

Literature and Politics in Latin America

chapter 5|6 pages

Orphans of Utopia

part II|70 pages

Pictures from an Exhibition

chapter 7|18 pages

Victoria Ocampo’s Sur

chapter 8|12 pages

García Lorca and His Times

chapter 9|12 pages

Gerald Brenan

chapter 10|6 pages

Carlos Fuentes Discovers America

chapter 11|10 pages

The Doleful Legacy of Carlton Beals

part III|90 pages

Cubans, Americans, and Cuban-Americans

chapter 12|26 pages

U.S.-Cuban Relations: Back to the Beginning

chapter 14|20 pages

The Cuba in Our Mind

chapter 15|12 pages

The Other Cuba

chapter 16|12 pages

Why the Latins Still Love Fidel

part IV|60 pages

Argentine Hours

part V|32 pages

Latins and Europeans

chapter 20|8 pages

The Strange Case of Erich Honecker

chapter 21|8 pages

Franco, Trujillo, and the CIA

chapter 22|14 pages

Why the Europeans Support the Sandinistas