Literature in Latin America allows us to know different ways to reframe life through arts. In these many ways, we find in Manuel Zapata Olivella (1920-2004) the expression of the political-aesthetic position of Afro-descendant culture in Colombia, specifically by the magazine Letras Nacionales. Zapata Olivella founded this magazine in 1965 and he managed it until 1970. In this context, this essay is concerned with discussing the relationship between the aforementioned publication and the dissemination of Afro-Latin American culture through literature and the theoretical-conceptual studies of Sociology of Literature. Thus, we present issues of black Colombian literature as a possibility of knowing the African presence here in the Americas.A ...
The Venezuelan historian José Marcial Ramos Guédez pays homage in this article to the medical anthro...
El presente artículo tiene como objetivo reflexionar en torno al ejercicio literario y pol&ia...
This article analyzes the thought of representing Afro-Caribbean mid-twentieth century intellectuals...
The objective of the following article is to think over the literary and political contribution made...
This work explores the processes by which Manuel Zapata Olivella’s thinking on the African diaspora ...
In this essay we propose the literary text as a space for the re-writing of Bantu’s and Yoruba’s tra...
This article aims to analyze how racism and recognition are represented in Manuel Zapata Olivella's ...
In this article, I examine the intellectual trajectory of Manuel Zapata Olivella in the Afro-Colombi...
The main purpose of this dissertation is to understand the emergence of Afro Hispanic American Liter...
An exploration of the life and literary contribution of Afro-Colombian poet Juan Zapata Olivella
This paper focuses on two basic aspects of the literary work of the Colombian writer Manuel Zapata O...
the concept of Afro-Colombian literature has achieved academic status in Colombia just in the 21st c...
This article explores the concepts of folklore, race and racism in the intellectual work of Delia Za...
Although the presence of black subjectivities is not new in Latin Americanliterature, the field had ...
Afro-hispanic literature in Latin America is a phenomenon that demands the understanding of racial i...
The Venezuelan historian José Marcial Ramos Guédez pays homage in this article to the medical anthro...
El presente artículo tiene como objetivo reflexionar en torno al ejercicio literario y pol&ia...
This article analyzes the thought of representing Afro-Caribbean mid-twentieth century intellectuals...
The objective of the following article is to think over the literary and political contribution made...
This work explores the processes by which Manuel Zapata Olivella’s thinking on the African diaspora ...
In this essay we propose the literary text as a space for the re-writing of Bantu’s and Yoruba’s tra...
This article aims to analyze how racism and recognition are represented in Manuel Zapata Olivella's ...
In this article, I examine the intellectual trajectory of Manuel Zapata Olivella in the Afro-Colombi...
The main purpose of this dissertation is to understand the emergence of Afro Hispanic American Liter...
An exploration of the life and literary contribution of Afro-Colombian poet Juan Zapata Olivella
This paper focuses on two basic aspects of the literary work of the Colombian writer Manuel Zapata O...
the concept of Afro-Colombian literature has achieved academic status in Colombia just in the 21st c...
This article explores the concepts of folklore, race and racism in the intellectual work of Delia Za...
Although the presence of black subjectivities is not new in Latin Americanliterature, the field had ...
Afro-hispanic literature in Latin America is a phenomenon that demands the understanding of racial i...
The Venezuelan historian José Marcial Ramos Guédez pays homage in this article to the medical anthro...
El presente artículo tiene como objetivo reflexionar en torno al ejercicio literario y pol&ia...
This article analyzes the thought of representing Afro-Caribbean mid-twentieth century intellectuals...