The price of the word: the indigenous voice in Huasipungo by Jorge Icaza
Abstract
This article proposes a reading of Jorge Icaza’s novel Huasipungo (1934) that focuses on the manner in which the native voice of the “huasipungueros” is constructed. This is a novel that tends towards the creation of a space for the voice and the body of the native national community. Nevertheless, we discover that, ironically, it shows how the indigenous population is physically destroyed just when appearing as a speaker. Foucault’s ideas closely accompany this analysis, where the bodies of the subordinate Indians are studied when it comes to beauty, color, odor, and hygiene.Downloads
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