Literature from the Global South: Latin American Literature
Latin American literature is shaped by Indigenous histories, European colonization, Catholic influence, African diasporic cultures, dictatorships, revolutions, inequality, migration, and struggles over memory and identity. Many Latin American writers use literature to explore the relationship between personal life and political power.
A major concept associated with Latin American fiction is magical realism. In magical realism, extraordinary or impossible events appear within ordinary reality and are treated as part of everyday life. This style can challenge narrow ideas of what counts as “real” and can also expose the violence, absurdity, and injustice of social systems.
Featured Works
Gabriel García Márquez, “The Incredible and Sad Tale of Innocent Eréndira and Her Heartless Grandmother”
This story can be read through themes of exploitation, innocence, family power, gender, poverty, and magical realism. Its strange and exaggerated elements intensify the critique of abuse and social cruelty.
Mario Vargas Llosa, The Storyteller
This novel explores storytelling, Indigenous identity, cultural assimilation, colonial legacies, and the tension between preserving a community’s way of life and adapting to dominant society.
Pablo Neruda, “We Are Many”
This poem presents identity as multiple, divided, and unstable. It invites readers to think about the many selves that exist within one person.