THE Virus of parisitis in three chilean novels: a journey into Baudelaire’s ideal

Authors

  • Francisca Folch Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7764/ANALESLITCHI.34.03

Keywords:

Blest Gana, Joaquín Edwards Bello, Marquis de Cuevas

Abstract

The world of pleasure offered by the European Belle Époque, as imagined by the South American elite, was incarnated in a romanticized vision of Paris that was pitted against native ennui. This conflict can be productively compared to the tension between ideal and spleen explored decades earlier by Baudelaire in The Flowers of Evil (1857). A Chilean example of this phenomenon can be seen in two emblematic Chilean novels, Alberto Blest Gana’s Los trasplantados (1904) and Joaquín Edwards Bello’s Criollos en París (1933), in which characters become infected by parisitis, the addiction to the corrupting pleasures of the city. Edwards Bello’s novel includes the character of Jorge Dueñas, a thinly veiled portrait of the extraordinary socialite Jorge Cuevas, who, in turn, in his novella El amigo Jacques (1912), makes a character out of his friend Edwards Bello, and contributes a similarly ambivalent response to the construction of modern Latin American identity.

Published

2021-05-06

How to Cite

Folch , F. . (2021). THE Virus of parisitis in three chilean novels: a journey into Baudelaire’s ideal. Anales De Literatura Chilena, (34), 53–71. https://doi.org/10.7764/ANALESLITCHI.34.03

Issue

Section

ARTICULOS