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Redefining Truths: Manuela Rosas as a subject of Imaginative Reconstruction in the Argentine Literary Realm

Rachel Morgan

Latin American Literary Review, Volume: 49, Issue: 98

Swansea University Author: Rachel Morgan

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DOI (Published version): 10.26824/lalr.284

Abstract

Manuela Rosas, the daughter of Federalist dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas, is an important nineteenth century political figure who was a consistent subject of imaginative reconstruction during the Rosas era. Much like her fellow women revolutionaries, namely Eva Perón and her mother, Encarnación Ezcur...

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Published in: Latin American Literary Review
ISSN: 2330-135X
Published: Latin American Literary Review Press 2022
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa59761
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spelling 2022-08-11T12:21:40.1339025 v2 59761 2022-04-04 Redefining Truths: Manuela Rosas as a subject of Imaginative Reconstruction in the Argentine Literary Realm acd2a84655043464cf5577b1326acea2 Rachel Morgan Rachel Morgan true false 2022-04-04 Manuela Rosas, the daughter of Federalist dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas, is an important nineteenth century political figure who was a consistent subject of imaginative reconstruction during the Rosas era. Much like her fellow women revolutionaries, namely Eva Perón and her mother, Encarnación Ezcurra de Rosas, Manuela assumed an active role in the Argentine political arena and was instrumental maintaining her father’s unparalleled political supremacy, acting as chief mediator between the government and the marginalised Argentine masses. This article argues how, in a series of nineteenth-century fictional works, namely those of renowned Unitarians José Mármol (Amalia; El retrato de Manuela Rosas, 1851) and Juana Manuela Gorriti (El guante negro; La hiza del mashorquero, 1865), Manuela has been inaccurately depicted as ‘la primera victíma de la tiranía de su padre’ who desperately needed rescuing. Both writers maintain that Rosas curtailed his daughter’s social freedom, and that she would have reached her true potential had she been raised by civilised Unitarians and not in a Federalist environment. However, María Rosa Lojo’s La princesa federal (2010) contests the claim that Manuela suffered, instead postulating that she was a resilient and empowered individual who was passionate about promoting the causa federalista, remaining loyal to her father out of choice. I offer an original critical analysis of the unacknowledged and divergent literary and historical representations of Manuela, examining how writers use the lack of historical evidence to manipulate and imaginatively reconstruct her life story and in doing so, blur the line between fact and fiction. Journal Article Latin American Literary Review 49 98 Latin American Literary Review Press 2330-135X Manuela, Rosas, women, femininity, imaginative reconstruction, myth, power, political reconciliation, national reconciliation, Unitarians, Federalists. 3 4 2022 2022-04-03 10.26824/lalr.284 https://www.lalrp.net/articles/abstract/10.26824/lalr.284/ Visit: https://www.lalrp.net/articles/abstract/10.26824/lalr.284/ for full text online. COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University 2022-08-11T12:21:40.1339025 2022-04-04T12:43:33.6695693 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - Modern Languages, Translation, and Interpreting Rachel Morgan 1 59761__23769__214fa0b09b794ff5995d2c7c9ae4183d.pdf 59761.pdf 2022-04-04T12:47:34.6507476 Output 201187 application/pdf Version of Record true Released under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license. true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
title Redefining Truths: Manuela Rosas as a subject of Imaginative Reconstruction in the Argentine Literary Realm
spellingShingle Redefining Truths: Manuela Rosas as a subject of Imaginative Reconstruction in the Argentine Literary Realm
Rachel Morgan
title_short Redefining Truths: Manuela Rosas as a subject of Imaginative Reconstruction in the Argentine Literary Realm
title_full Redefining Truths: Manuela Rosas as a subject of Imaginative Reconstruction in the Argentine Literary Realm
title_fullStr Redefining Truths: Manuela Rosas as a subject of Imaginative Reconstruction in the Argentine Literary Realm
title_full_unstemmed Redefining Truths: Manuela Rosas as a subject of Imaginative Reconstruction in the Argentine Literary Realm
title_sort Redefining Truths: Manuela Rosas as a subject of Imaginative Reconstruction in the Argentine Literary Realm
author_id_str_mv acd2a84655043464cf5577b1326acea2
author_id_fullname_str_mv acd2a84655043464cf5577b1326acea2_***_Rachel Morgan
author Rachel Morgan
author2 Rachel Morgan
format Journal article
container_title Latin American Literary Review
container_volume 49
container_issue 98
publishDate 2022
institution Swansea University
issn 2330-135X
doi_str_mv 10.26824/lalr.284
publisher Latin American Literary Review Press
college_str Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
department_str School of Culture and Communication - Modern Languages, Translation, and Interpreting{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Culture and Communication - Modern Languages, Translation, and Interpreting
url https://www.lalrp.net/articles/abstract/10.26824/lalr.284/
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description Manuela Rosas, the daughter of Federalist dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas, is an important nineteenth century political figure who was a consistent subject of imaginative reconstruction during the Rosas era. Much like her fellow women revolutionaries, namely Eva Perón and her mother, Encarnación Ezcurra de Rosas, Manuela assumed an active role in the Argentine political arena and was instrumental maintaining her father’s unparalleled political supremacy, acting as chief mediator between the government and the marginalised Argentine masses. This article argues how, in a series of nineteenth-century fictional works, namely those of renowned Unitarians José Mármol (Amalia; El retrato de Manuela Rosas, 1851) and Juana Manuela Gorriti (El guante negro; La hiza del mashorquero, 1865), Manuela has been inaccurately depicted as ‘la primera victíma de la tiranía de su padre’ who desperately needed rescuing. Both writers maintain that Rosas curtailed his daughter’s social freedom, and that she would have reached her true potential had she been raised by civilised Unitarians and not in a Federalist environment. However, María Rosa Lojo’s La princesa federal (2010) contests the claim that Manuela suffered, instead postulating that she was a resilient and empowered individual who was passionate about promoting the causa federalista, remaining loyal to her father out of choice. I offer an original critical analysis of the unacknowledged and divergent literary and historical representations of Manuela, examining how writers use the lack of historical evidence to manipulate and imaginatively reconstruct her life story and in doing so, blur the line between fact and fiction.
published_date 2022-04-03T04:17:19Z
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