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Nueva Granada: Paul Horgan and the Southwest (Tarleton State University Southwestern Studies in the Humanities #6)

Nueva Granada: Paul Horgan and the Southwest (Tarleton State University Southwestern Studies in the Humanities #6)

Current price: $22.50
Publication Date: May 1st, 1995
Publisher:
Texas A&M University Press
ISBN:
9780890966402
Pages:
160

Description

In a delicate balance between old and new, Nueva Granada presents a long personal interview that has never before been published to complement a fresh, updated selection of Robert Franklin Gish's many essays and articles about Paul Horgan and his Southwestern writings. In a career that spans seven decades, Paul Horgan's fiction and non-fiction have provided readers with an ardent regard for the lives and landscapes, history and lore of the land the Spanish explorers called Nueva Granada. As Gish revisits Horgan's work, he discovers an evolving Southwest, a land filled with diversity and new perspectives. In No Quarter Given, A Distant Trumpet, The Peach Stone, Far from Cibola, Whitewater, Josiah Gregg and His Early West, The Thin Mountain Air, Conquistadors in North American History, Lamy of Santa Fe, Mexico Bay, and many other works, Horgan provides readers with a classic image of the West, but Gish shows us that Horgan transcends regions and touches on universal qualities. In fact, Gish stresses Horgan's recognition of a new West, a place that is not only dense with geographic diversity, but ethnic and cultural diversity as well. Both Horgan's work and Gish's critical essays and his interview with the author reveal the "heroic triad" of cultures. Nueva Granada explicitly explores Horgan's reactions to and portrayals of American Indian, Spanish/Mexican, and Anglo interrelationships in the old West that has now become new. Gish is a sensitive explorer as he travels the boundaries and borders of Horgan's fiction and history.

About the Author

Robert Franklin Gish is director of the Ethnic Studies Program at California Polytechnic State University. He is author of Paul Horgan, Frontier's End: The Life and Literature of Harvey Fergusson, Songs of My Hunter Heart: A Western Kinship, First Horses: Stories of the New West, and, most recently, When Coyote Howls: A Lavaland Fable.

Praise for Nueva Granada: Paul Horgan and the Southwest (Tarleton State University Southwestern Studies in the Humanities #6)

"Noted western literary critic Robert Gish collects here a revealing and rewarding gathering of his sprightly essays about Paul Horgan and the multicultural Southwest. . . . A treat for specialists and generalists alike.”--Richard W. Etulain, director of the Center for the American West, University of New Mexico
— Richard W. Etulain, director of the Center for the American West, University of