Bello and Bolívar: Poetry and Politics in the Spanish American Revolution (Cambridge Studies in Latin American and Iberian Literature) - Poetry and Politics in the Spanish American Revolution
Antonio Cussen
Cambridge University Press (1992)
In Collection
#3052
0*
Lit Crit
Hardcover 052141248X
eng
Product Details
LoC Classification PQ8549.B3A7436 1991
Dewey 861
Nationality Venezuela
Pub Place Cambridge, MA
Cover Price $105.00
No. of Pages 222
Height x Width 9.0 x 6.3  inch
Personal Details
Read It Yes
Links Amazon US
Barnes & Noble
Amazon Japan
Amazon Canada
Amazon UK
User Defined
Conflict 19th Century misc
Notes
Andrés de Jesús María y José Bello López (November 29, 1781 – October 15, 1865) Venezuelan humanist, poet, lawmaker, philosopher, educator and philologist, whose political and literary works constitute an important part of Spanish American culture.

In June 1810, the Venezuelans, fearful of French aggression, sent a diplomatic mission to London in search of an ally. The mission was headed by Símon Bolívar; the secretary was Andres Bello. Bello remained in London through the Spanish American Revolution and became one of the most accomplished members of the Spanish-speaking intelligentsia. In this book, Antonio Cussen reconstructs Andres Bello's account of the Revolution. The official history of the Revolution, the heroic history of Bolívar, is replaced by the account of a poet, who was first Bolívar's teacher, and later his critic. Through a detailed study of the manuscripts of Bello's unfinished poem "América" the author argues that Bello recorded the disintegration of the Augustan model of power and culture and intimated the inevitable approach of liberalism with a certain longing for the classical culture of his youth.