In a unique analysis of Cuban literature inside and outside the country&#x2019;s borders Eduardo Gonz&#xE1;lez looks closely at the work of three of the most important contemporary Cuban authors to write in the post-1959 diaspora: Guillermo Cabrera Infante (1929&#x2013;2005) who left Cuba for good in 1965 and established himself in London; Antonio Ben&#xED;tez-Rojo (1931&#x2013;2005) who settled in the United States; and Leonardo Padura Fuentes (b. 1955) who still lives and writes in Cuba.<br/><br/>Through the positive experiences of exile and wandering that appear in their work these three writers exhibit what Gonz&#xE1;lez calls &#x201C;Romantic authorship&#x201D; a deep connection to the Romantic spirit of irony and complex sublimity crafted in literature by Lord Byron Thomas De Quincey and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. In Gonz&#xE1;lez&#x2019;s view a writer becomes a belated Romantic by dint of exile adopted creatively with comic or tragic irony. Gonz&#xE1;lez weaves into his analysis related cinematic elements of myth folktale and the grotesque that appear in the work of filmmakers such as Alfred Hitchcock and Pedro Almod&#xF3;var. Placing the three Cuban writers in conversation with artists and thinkers from British and American literature anthropology philosophy psychoanalysis and cinema Gonz&#xE1;lez ultimately provides a space in which Cuba and its literature inside and outside its borders are deprovincialized.
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