Facundo
File:Facundo sarmiento.jpg | |
Author | Domingo Faustino Sarmiento |
---|---|
Original title | 'Facundo: Civilización y barbarie' |
Translator | Mary Mann Kathleen Ross |
Cover artist | Alberto Nicasio |
Language | Spanish |
Publisher | El Progreso de Chile (first, serial, edition in original Spanish) Hafner (Mary Mann translation, English) University of California Press (Kathleen Ross translation, English) |
Publication date | 1845 |
Publication place | Argentina |
Published in English | 1868 (Mary Mann translation) 2003 (Kathleen Ross translation) |
Media type | |
ISBN | 0520239806 |
Facundo: Civilization and Barbarism is an 1845 book by Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, a writer and journalist who became the seventh president of Argentina. It is a cornerstone of Latin American literature: a work of creative non-fiction that helped define the parameters for thinking about modernization, development, power, and the role of culture in the region. Subtitled Civilization and Barbarism, Facundo contrasts civilization and barbarism as seen in early nineteenth-century Argentina. Literary critic Roberto González Echevarría calls it "the most important book written by a Latin American in any discipline or genre".[1]
Facundo describes the life of Juan Facundo Quiroga, a gaucho who had terrorized provincial Argentina in the 1820s and 1830s. But translator Kathleen Ross points out that Sarmiento also published Facundo to "denounce the tyranny of the Argentine dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas."[2] Juan Manuel de Rosas, ruled Argentina from 1829 to 1832 and again from 1835 to 1852; it was thanks to Rosas that Sarmiento was in exile, in Chile, at the time that he was writing the book.
Sarmiento sees Rosas as heir to Facundo: both are caudillos and representatives of a barbarism that derives from the nature of the Argentine countryside.[3] As such, they are also representatives of one part of Argentina itself. And, as Ross explains, Sarmiento's book therefore is engaged in describing the "Argentine national character, explaining the effects of Argentina's geographical conditions on personality, the 'barbaric' nature of the countryside versus the 'civilizing' influence of the city, and the great future awaiting Argentina when it opened its doors wide to European immigration."[2]
Throughout the text, Sarmiento explores this dichotomy between civilization and barbarism. As Kimberly Ball observes, "civilization is identified with northern Europe, North America, cities, Unitarians, Paz, and Rivadavia",[4] while "barbarism is identified with Latin America, Spain, Asia, the Middle East, the countryside, Federalists, Facundo, and Rosas."[4] It is in the way that it articulates this opposition that Sarmiento's book has had such a profound influence. Again, in the words of González Echevarría: "in proposing the dialectic between civilization and barbarism as the central conflict in Latin American culture Facundo gave shape to a polemic that began in the colonial period and continues to the present day".[5]
Background
Sarmiento wrote Facundo in 1845, while exiled in Chile, as an attack on Juan Manuel de Rosas, the Argentine dictator at the time. The book was a critical analysis of Argentine culture as he saw it represented in men such as Rosas and the regional leader Juan Facundo Quiroga, a leader in San Juan. For Sarmiento, both Rosas and Quiroga were caudillos, that is, strongmen who did not submit to the law.[6]
Sarmiento's book is both a critique and also a symptom of Argentina's cultural conflicts. The country had gained independence from the Spanish Empire in 1810, but one of Sarmiento's complaints is that the country had yet to cohere as a unified entity. Indeed, its major political division saw those who favoured centralization (the Unitarists or Unitarians, with whom Sarmiento sided) counterposed against those who believed that the regions should maintain a good measure of autonomy (the Federalists). In part, this was also a division between the city and the countryside. Then as now, Buenos Aires was the country’s biggest and wealthiest city as a result of access to river trade routes and to the South Atlantic. Buenos Aires was exposed not only to trade, but also to fresh ideas and European culture. These economic and cultural differences became a cause of tension between Buenos Aires and the smaller Argentine cities.[7] Ironically, Sarmiento himself came from the provinces, as a native of the Western town of San Juan.
Argentine civil war
Argentina's divisions led to a civil war that began in 1826 when Bernardino Rivadavia was elected president. Supporters of decentralized government challenged the Unitarist Party, leading to the outbreak in violence. Federalists Juan Facundo Quiroga and Juan Manuel de Rosas wanted more autonomy for the individual provinces, and were inclined to reject European culture.[7] The Unitarists defended Rivadavia’s presidency since it created educational opportunities for rural inhabitants through a European-staffed university program. However, under Rivadavia's rule, the salaries of the common laborers were subjected to government control as "the government placed ceilings on wages"[8], and the gauchos ("cattle-wrangling horsemen of the pampas"[9]) were either imprisoned, or forced to work without pay.[8]
A series of governors were installed and replaced beginning in 1827 with the appointment of Federalist Manuel Dorrego as the Buenos Aires governor. When Dorrego was overthrown and executed, he was replaced by Unitarist Juan Lavalle.[10] Lavalle's rule lasted until he was defeated by a militia of gauchos led by Rosas. By the end of 1829, the legislature had appointed Rosas as governor of Buenos Aires.[9] Under Rosas's rule, many intellectuals fled either to Chile, as in Sarmiento's case, or to Uruguay, as Sarmiento himself notes.[11]
Juan Manuel de Rosas
According to literary critic John Lynch, Juan Manuel de Rosas was "a landowner, a rural caudillo, and the dictator of Buenos Aires from 1829 to 1852".[12] He was born into a wealthy family, with high social status, but Rosas's strict upbringing had a deep psychological influence on him.[13] Sarmiento asserts that because of his mother, "the spectacle of authority and servitude must have left lasting impressions on him."[14] Shortly after reaching puberty, Rosas was sent to an estancia and stayed there for about thirty years. In time, he learned how to manage the estancia and he established an authoritarian government in the area. While in power, Rosas incarcerated inhabitants for unspecified reasons, which Sarmiento argues was similar to the ways he treated cattles in his estancias. Sarmiento argues that this was one of the methods of making his citizens like the "tamest, most orderly cattle known."[15]
Juan Manuel de Rosas's first term as governor lasted only three years. His rule, with help from Juan Facundo Quiroga and Estanislao Lopez, was respected and he was praised for his ability to maintain harmony between Buenos Aires and the rural areas. The country fell into disorder after Rosas's resignation in 1832, and in 1835 he was once again called to lead the country. However, he ruled the country not as he did during his first term as governor, but as a dictator, forcing all citizens to support his Federalist regime.[9] Ball argues that
Rosas embraced totalitarianism. Every citizen of Buenos Aires was compelled on pain of death to wear a red ribbon, emblematic of support for Federalism and the Rosas regime...The press was censored and the mazorca,Rosas's vigilante squad, patrolled the streets on the lookout for the slightest infraction. At any time, Rosas could have anyone arrested and subjected to execution, torture, imprisonment or exile.[16]
Domingo Faustino Sarmiento
In Facundo, Sarmiento is both the narrator and a main character. The book contains autobiographical elements from Sarmiento’s life, and he comments on the entire Argentine situation. He also analyses and expresses his own opinion, as well as chronicling some historic events. In the book's dichotomy between civilization and barbarism, Sarmiento's character represents civilization, steeped as he is in European and North American ideas. He stands for education and development, as opposed to both Rosas and Facundo, who symbolise barbarism.
In real life, Sarmiento was an educator, a civilized man who was a militant adherent to the Unitarist movement. During the Argentine civil war he fought against Facundo several times, and while in Spain became a member of the Literary Society of Professors.[17] Exiled to Chile by Rosas when he started to write Facundo, Sarmiento would later return as a politician. He was member of the Senate after Rosas's fall, and was president of Argentina for six years (1868–1874). During his presidency, Sarmiento concentrated on migration, sciences, and culture. His ideas were based on European civilization; for him, the development of a country was rooted in education. To this end, he founded Argentina's military and naval colleges.[18]
Synopsis
After a lengthy introduction, Facundo's fifteen chapters divide broadly into three sections: chapters one to four outline Argentine geography, anthropology, and history; chapters five to fourteen recount the life of Juan Facundo Quiroga; and the concluding chapter fifteen expounds on Sarmiento's vision of Argentina's possible future under a Unitarist government.[3] In Sarmiento's words, the reason why he chose to provide Argentine context and use Facundo Quiroga to condemn Rosas' dictatorship is that "in Facundo Quiroga I do not only see simply a caudillo, but rather a manifestation of Argentine life as it has been made by colonization and the peculiarities of the land."[19]
Argentine context
Facundo begins with a geographical description of Argentina, from the Andes in the west to the eastern Atlantic coast, where two main river systems converge at the boundary between Argentina and Uruguay. This river estuary, called the Rio de Plata, is the location of Buenos Aires, the capital. Through his discussion of Argentina's geography, Sarmiento demonstrates Buenos Aires' advantages; the river systems were communications arteries which, by enabling trade, helped the city to achieve civilization. Buenos Aires failed to spread civilization to the rural areas and as a result, much of the rest of Argentina was doomed to barbarism. Sarmiento also argues that the pampas, Argentina’s wide and empty plains, gave "no place for people to escape and hide for defense and this prohibits civilization in most parts of Argentina."[20] Despite the barriers to civilization caused by Argentina’s geography, Sarmiento argues that many of the country's problems were caused by gauchos like Juan Manuel de Rosas, who were barbaric, uneducated, ignorant, and arrogant. Progression of society to achieve civilization was prohibited because of their characters.[21] Sarmiento then describes the four main types of gaucho and these characterizations aid in understanding Argentine leaders, such as Juan Manuel de Rosas.[22] Sarmiento argues that without an understanding of these Argentine character types, "it is impossible to understand our political personages, or the primordial, American character of the bloody struggle that tears apart the Argentine Republic".[23]
Sarmiento then moves on to the Argentine peasants, who are "independent of all need, free of all subjection, with no idea of government."[24] The peasants gather at taverns, where they spend their time drinking and gambling. They display their eagerness to prove their physical strength through activities such as horsemanship and knife fights. These displays rarely led to deaths, his residence was sometimes used as a refuge on the rare occasions when killings occurred and this all happened before he became politically powerful.[22]
According to Sarmiento, all of these elements are crucial in helping readers to understand the Argentina Revolution, in which Argentina gained independence from Spain. Although Argentina’s war of independence was prompted by the influence of European ideas, Buenos Aires was the only city that could achieve civilization. Rural people participated in the war to demonstrate their physical strengths rather than because they wanted to civilize the country. In the end, the revolution was a failure because the barbaric instincts of the rural population led to the loss and dishonor of the civilized city—Buenos Aires.[25]
Life of Juan Facundo Quiroga
The second section of Facundo explores the life of its titular character, Juan Facundo Quiroga—the "Tiger of the Plains".[26] Despite being born into a wealthy family, Facundo Quiroga received only a basic education in reading and writing.[26]. He loved gambling, being called "el jugador" (the player)[27]—in fact, Sarmiento describes gambling for him as "an ardent passion burning in his belly".[28] As a youth Facundo Quiroga was antisocial and rebellious, refusing to mix with other children,[26] and these traits became more pronounced as he matured. Sarmiento describes one incident where Facundo Quiroga killed a man, saying this type of behaviour "has marked his passage through the world."[28]
Eventually relations with his family completely broke down, and taking on the life of a gaucho, Facundo Quiroga joined the caudillos in the Entre los Ríos province.[29] His killing of two Spaniards after a jailbreak saw him acclaimed as a hero among the gauchos, and on relocating to La Rioja Facundo was appointed to a leadership position in the Llanos Militia. He built a reputation and won his comrades' respect through his fierce battlefield performances, but hated and tried to destroy those who differed from him by being civilized and well-educated.[30]
In 1825, when Unitarist Bernardino Rivadavia became the governor of the Buenos Aires province, he held a meeting with representatives from all provinces in Argentina. Facundo Quiroga was present, as the governor of La Rioja.[31] Sarmiento gives a physical description of the man he considers to personify the caudillo: "short with a muscular stature, strong shoulders with a short neck sustaining his elliptical face", and "eyes ... filled with passion and wilderness".[26] Rivadavia was soon overthrown, and Manuel Dorrego became the new governor. A Federalist, Sarmiento contends that Dorrego was not interested in social progress nor in ending barbaric behaviour in Argentina by improving the level of civilization and education of its rural inhabitants. However, in the turmoil that characterised Argentine politics at the time, Dorrego was assassinated by Unitarists and Facundo Quiroga defeated by Unitarist General Paz.[32] Facundo Quiroga escaped to Buenos Aires and joined the Federalist government of Juan Manuel de Rosas. During the ensuing civil war between the two ideologies, Facundo Quiroga conquered the San Luis, Rio Quinto and Mendoza provinces.[33]
On his return to his San Juan home, which Sarmiento says Facundo Quiroga governed "solely with his terrifying name",[34] he realized that his government did not have support from Rosas. He went to Buenos Aires to confront Rosas, who sent him on another mission. On his way to his destination Facundo Quiroga was shot and killed.[35] According to Sarmiento, the murder was plotted by Rosas: "An impartial history still awaits facts and revelations, in order to point its finger at the instigator of the assassins".[36]
Consequences of Facundo's death
In the final chapters, Sarmiento delves into the consequences of Facundo's death for the history and politics of the Argentine Republic.[37] He further analyzes Rosas's government, commenting on dictatorship, tyranny, the use of force to maintain order and stability, the support of the people, and Rosas's personality. Sarmiento criticizes Rosas by using the words of the dictator, making sarcastic remarks about what Rosas was doing and describing the "terror" that was established during the dictatorship, the contradictions of the government and the situation in the provinces that were ruled by Facundo: "The red ribbon is a materialization of the terror that accompanies you everywhere, in the streets, in the bosom of the family; it must be thought about when dressing, when undressing, and ideas are always engraved upon us by association".[38]
Finally, Sarmiento examines the consequences of Rosas's government by attacking the dictator and establishing a bigger dichotomy. By setting France, symbolizing civilization, against Argentina, representing barbarism, Sarmiento contrasts culture and savagery:
"France's blockade had lasted for two years, and the 'American' government, inspired by 'American' spirit, was facing off with France, European principles, European pretensions. The social results of the French blockade, however, had been fruitful for the Argentine Republic, and served to demonstrate in all their nakedness the current state of mind and the new elements of struggle, which were to ignite a fierce war than can end only with the fall of that monstrous government."[39]
Genre and style
Spanish critic and philosopher Miguel de Unamuno comments of the book: "I never took Facundo by Sarmiento as a historical work, nor do I think it can be very valued in that regard. I always thought of it as a literary work, as a historical novel."[40] However, Facundo cannot be classified either as a novel or as a specific genre of literature. According to González Echevarría, the book is an "essay, biography, autobiography, novel, epic, memoir, confession, political pamphlet, diatribe, scientific treatise, travelogue" all at the same time.[5] Sarmiento's style unifies the three distinct portions of his work, and the common thread is the life of Juan Facundo Quiroga. Even the first section, describing Argentina's geography, follows this pattern, since Sarmiento contends that Facundo is a natural product of this environment.[41]
Furthermore, the book is a combination between the fiction and the real context of the Argentinean Republic. In the book, Rosas has characteristics of both the real life and the imagination of Sarmiento. Since the book is criticizing the government, Rosas' dictatorship is seen as the main cause of all the problems in Argentina. Therefore, the context of barbarism and savagery that Sarmiento explains in his book is a function of Rosas' government and his dictatorship.[42]
Themes
Civilization and barbarism
More than just a critique of Rosas's dictatorship, Facundo is also a broader investigation into Argentine history and culture, which Sarmiento charts through the rise, controversial rule, and downfall of Juan Facundo Quiroga, an archetypical Argentine caudillo. Sarmiento summarizes the book's message in the phrase: "That is the point: to be or not to be savages."[43] This dichotomy, between civilization and barbarism, is the book's central idea; Facundo Quiroga is portrayed as wild, untamed, and as standing in opposition to true progress through the common enlightenment of European society—found at that time in the metropolitan society of Buenos Aires.[44]
The conflict between civilization and barbarism mirrors Latin America's difficulties faced in the post-Independence era. Sorensen Goodrich argues that, although Sarmiento was not the one to first articulate this dichotomy, he managed to turn it into an powerful and prominent concept that would impact on future Latin America Literature.[45] He explores the issue of civilization versus the cruder aspects of a caudillo culture of brutality and absolute power. Caudillos like Facundo Quiroga are seen, at the beginning of the book, as the antithesis of education, high culture, and civil stability. They are the agents of instability and chaos, destroying societies through their blatant disregard for humanity and social progress.[46]
Facundo set forth an oppositional message that promoted a more beneficial alternative for society at large. Although Sarmiento advocated various changes, such as honest officials who understood enlightenment ideas of European and Classical origin, for him education was the key. He viewed barbarism, linked with ignorance, poverty, lack of education and anarchy, as a never-ending litany of social ills.[47] He used the pampas wilderness described in Facundo to illustrate his social analysis; those who were isolated and opposed to political dialogue were symbols of ignorance and anarchy, a reflection of Argentina's desolate physical geography.[48]
If Sarmiento viewed himself as civilized, Rosas was barbaric. Historian David Rock argues that "contemporary opponents reviled Rosas as a bloody tyrant and a symbol of barbarism."[49] Sarmiento attacked Rosas through his book by promoting education and "civilized" status, while using political power to dispose of any kind of hindrance. In linking Europe with civilization, and civilization with education, Sarmiento conveyed an admiration of European culture and civilization which at the same time gave him a sense of dissatisfaction with his own culture, motivating him to drive it towards civilization.[50] Conversely, Latin America was connected to barbarism, which Sarmiento used mainly to illustrate the way in which Argentina was disconnected from the numerous resources surrounding it, which limited the growth of the country.[46]
Writing and power
In post-independence Latin American history, dictatorships have been relatively common—examples range from Paraguay's José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia in the nineteenth century to Chile's Augusto Pinochet in the twentieth. In this context, Latin American literature has been distinguished by the protest novel; the main story is based around the dictator figure, his behavior, characteristics and the situation of the people under his regime. Writers such as Sarmiento used the power of the written word in order to criticize government, using literature as a tool, an instance of resistance and as a weapon against repression.[51]
Making use of the connection between writing and power was one of Sarmiento's strategies. For him, writing was a catalyst that aroused action.[52] While the gauchos fought with physical weapons, Sarmiento used his voice and language.[53] Sorensen strongly states that Sarmiento used "text as [a] weapon."[51] Sarmiento wanted his book to gain an audience, not only in Argentina, but also in many places, especially United States and Europe since these countries were close to civilization;his purpose was to seduce his readers toward his own political point of view.[54] The numerous translations of Facundo are proof of this concept; for Sarmiento, writing was associated with power, and conquest.[55]
Sarmiento mocks the government in many of his books since they portray his political views, although Facundo is the most overt example.[56] He elevates his own status at the expense of the ruling elite, almost portraying himself as invincible due to the power of writing. Toward the end of 1840, Sarmiento was exiled. Covered with bruises received the day before from unruly soldiers, he wrote in French "On ne tue point les idees" (misquoted from "on ne tue pas de coups de fusil aux idees", which means "ideas cannot be killed by guns"). The government decided to decipher the message, and on learning the translation, said "So! What does this mean?"[57] With the failure of his oppressors to understand his meaning, Sarmiento is able to illustrate their ineptitude. His written words are presented as a "code" that needs to be "deciphered".[57] Unlike Sarmiento, those in power are barbaric and uneducated, and their bafflement not only demonstrates the ignorance of Rosas's associates, but also, according to Sorensen, illustrates "the fundamental displacement whicn any cultural transplantation brings about," since Argentine rural inhabitants and Rosas' associates were unable to accept the civilized culture which Sarmiento believed would lead to the progression of Argentina.[58]
Legacy
For Kathleen Ross, Facundo is "one of the foundational works of Spanish American literary history".[59] It has been enormously influential because of it aids to reach modernization. Also the prose style, complemented by "tremendous beauty and passion," supports the argument that this book is able to summon changes in Argentina. Facundo is not only a powerful founding text[2] but, according to literary critic González Echevarría: "It is the first Latin American classic, and the most important book written about Latin America by a Latin American in any discipline or genre."[1] He asserts that Facundo provided the impetus for other writers to examine dictatorship in Latin America. Moreover, González Echevarría explains that Facundo is still read today since Sarmiento created "a voice for modern Latin American authors".[5] He argues that the reason for this is that "Latin American authors struggle with its legacy, rewriting Facundo in their works even as they try to untangle themselves from its discourse."[5] Subsequent dictator novels, such as El Señor Presidente by Miguel Ángel Asturias and The Feast of the Goat by Mario Vargas Llosa, were influenced by its publication.[5] A knowledge of Facundo boosts and expands the reader’s understanding of these later books.[60]
According to González Echevarría, due to the impact of Sarmiento's essay genre and fictional literature, the gaucho has become "an object of nostalgia, a lost origin around which to build a national mythology."[60] However, he also argues that Juan Facundo Quiroga continues to exist, since he represents "our unresolved struggle between good and evil and our lives' inexorable drive toward death."[60] While Sarmiento was trying to eliminate the gaucho, he also transformed him into a "national symbol."[60] According to translator Kathleen Ross, "Facundo continues to inspire controversy and debate because it contributes to national myths of modernization, anti-populism, and racist ideology."[61]
According to Sorensen, "early readers of Facundo were deeply influenced by the struggles that preceded and followed Rosas's Dictatorship, and their views sprang from their relationship to the strife for interpretive and political hegemony".[62] An empirical proof of the book's influence is the fact of Sarmiento’s rise to power. He became president of Argentina in 1868—an educator and writer, he used his skills to his advantage in order to unite and therefore ensure that the nation achieved civilization.[63]Sorenson argues that "Facundo lends itself admirably to being read as a blueprint for modernization"[64] and it is underlined by the impact that the book and its author had in Argentina.[64] Sarmiento wrote several books, but he viewed Facundo as authorizing his political views.[65]
Publication and translation history
The first edition of Facundo was published in instalments in 1845, in the literary supplement of the Chilean newspaper El Progreso. The second edition, also published in Chile (in 1851), contained significant alterations—Sarmiento removed the last two chapters on the advice of Valentín Alsina, an exiled Argentinian lawyer and politician.[3] However the missing sections reappeared in 1874 in a later edition, because Sarmiento saw them as crucial to the book's development.[66]
Facundo was first translated in 1868, by Mary Mann, with the title Life in the Argentine Republic in the Days of the Tyrants; or, Civilization and Barbarism. More recently, Kathleen Ross has undertaken a modern and complete translation, published in 2003 by the University of California Press. In Ross's "Translator's Introduction," she notes about Mann's nineteenth-century version of the text that it was influenced by Mann's friendship with Sarmiento and by the fact that he was at the time a candidate in the Argentine presidential election: "Mann wished to further her friend's cause abroad by presenting Sarmiento as an admirer and emulator of United States political and cultural institutions." Hence this translation cut much of what made Sarmiento's work distinctively part of the Hispanic tradition. Ross continues: "Mann's elimination of metaphor, the stylistic device perhaps most characteristic of Sarmiento's prose, is especially striking."[67]
Footnotes
- ^ a b González Echevarría 2003, p. 1
- ^ a b c Ross 2003, p. 17
- ^ a b c Ross 2003, p. 18
- ^ a b Ball 1999, p. 177
- ^ a b c d e González Echevarría 2003, p. 2
- ^ Ball 1999, p. 171
- ^ a b Ball 1999, p. 172
- ^ a b Shumway 1993, p. 84
- ^ a b c Ball 1999, p. 173
- ^ Ball 1999, p. 172–173
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 229
- ^ Lynch 1981, p. 1
- ^ Lynch 1981, p. 11
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 213
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 215
- ^ Ball 1999, p. 179
- ^ Mann 1868, p. 357
- ^ González Echevarría 2003, p. 10
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 38
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, Chapter 1
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, Chapter 2
- ^ a b Sarmiento 2003, Chapter 3
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 71
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 72
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, Chapter 4
- ^ a b c d Sarmiento 2003, p. 93 Cite error: The named reference "sarm93" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Newton 1965, p. 11
- ^ a b Sarmiento 2003, p. 95
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, Chapter 5
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, Chapter 6
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, Chapter 7 & 8
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, Chapter 8 & 9
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, Chapter 11 & 12
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 157
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, Chapter 13
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 204
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 227
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 210
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 228
- ^ Qtd. Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 42
- ^ Carilla 1973, p. 12
- ^ Ludmer 2002, p. 17
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 35
- ^ Sarmiento 2003, p. 99
- ^ Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 6
- ^ a b Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 10–11
- ^ Bravo 1994, p. 247
- ^ Bravo 1994, p. 248
- ^ Qtd. Ludmer 2002, p. 7
- ^ Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 9
- ^ a b Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 33
- ^ Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 25
- ^ Ludmer 2002, p. 9
- ^ Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 85
- ^ Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 27
- ^ Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 100
- ^ a b Sarmiento 2003, p. 30
- ^ Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 84
- ^ Ross 2003, p. 17
- ^ a b c d González Echevarría 2003, p. 15
- ^ Ross 2003, p. 21
- ^ Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 67
- ^ Sorensen Goodrich 1996, pp. 99
- ^ a b Sorensen Goodrich 1996, p. 99
- ^ Sorensen Goodrich 1996, pp. 100–101
- ^ Carilla 1973, p. 13
- ^ Ross 2003, p. 19
References
- Ball, Kimberly (1999), "Facundo by Domingo F. Sarmiento", in Moss, Joyce; Valestuk, Lorraine (eds.), Latin American Literature and Its Times, vol. 1, World Literature and Its Times: Profiles of Notable Literary Works and the Historical Events That Influenced Them, Detroit: Gale Group, pp. 171–180, ISBN 0787637262
- Bravo, Héctor Félix (1990), "Profiles of educators: Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (1811–88)", Prospects: The Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, 20 (74), Paris: UNESCO: International Bureau of Education: 247–256
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- Carilla, Emilio (1973), Lengua y estilo en el Facundo, Buenos Aires: Universidad nacional de Tucumán, ISBN 3942402108
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value: checksum (help).
- González Echevarría, Roberto (1985), The Voice of the Masters: Writing and Authority in Modern Latin American Literature, Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, ISBN 0292787162.
- González Echevarría, Roberto (2003), "Facundo: An Introduction", in Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (ed.), Facundo: Civilization and Barbarism, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, pp. 1–16.
- Ludmer, Josefina (2002), The Gaucho Genre: A Treatise on the Motherland, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, ISBN 0822328445. Trans. Molly Weigel.
- Lynch, John (1981), Argentine Dictator: Juan Manuel de Rosas 1829–1852, New York, US: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0198211295
- Mann, Mrs Horace (1868), "Biographical Sketch of the Author", in Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (ed.), Life in the Argentine Republic in the Days of the Tyrants, or, Civilization and Barbarism, New York: Hafner, pp. 276–396. Book is by Domingo Sarmiento.
- Martínez Estrada, Ezequiel (1969), Sarmiento, Buenos Aires: Editorial Sudamericana, ISBN 9508451076.
- Newton, Jorge (1965), Facundo Quiroga: Aventura y leyenda, Buenos Aires: Plus Ultra, ISBN unavailable
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- Ross, Kathleen (2003), "Translator's Introduction", in Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (ed.), Facundo: Civilization and Barbarism, trans. Kathleen Ross, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, pp. 17–26.
- Sarmiento, Domingo Faustino (2003), Facundo: Civilization and Barbarism, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press (published 1845), ISBN 0520239806 The first complete English translation. Trans. Kathleen Ross.
- Shumway, Nicolas, The Invention of Argentina, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, ISBN 0520082842
- Sorensen Goodrich, Diana (1996), Facundo and the Construction of Argentine Culture, Austin: University of Texas Press, ISBN 0292727909
External links
- Facundo in the original Spanish