Monday, February 6, 2017

Testimonio - Secondary Source Experience

Before I began my formal research on testimonio last week, I had a basic knowledge of what this genre is from exposure in past English classes.  However, it was interesting to get a more in depth understanding of testimonio as well as to learn a thing or two about the history of the genre.

For those unfamiliar with testimonio, it is a form of autobiography that is typically written by marginalized groups of people, and more specifically, by Latinx women.  Two of its defining features are its focus on telling a collective experience as opposed to an individualized one and its use of multiple languages. 

This second feature turned out to be a problem for me while I was doing my research.  A significant number of the articles that I found were written either entirely or mostly in Spanish.  The first thing I did to combat this issue was to specify in my search options that I was looking for works written in English.  This did completely fix my problem though because bilingual research would still appear even if it contained only a small amount of English.  Ultimately, I had to just look through the results to find research that worked for me.  Once I found one, it helped to look at other works that were referenced and cited within the article.  These tended to be relevant and useful as well. 

Another interesting issue that I ran into had to do with the fact that testimonio is not as recognized or well-known as a lot of other genres.  I noticed there were a decent amount of primary sources, but when it came to finding secondary sources, many of them involved arguments for testimonio being useful and valid to teach in classrooms, which wasn’t quite what I was looking for.     



3 comments:

  1. I have to be honest I have never heard of a testimonio before. Is it an older genre that has faded into obscurity or is it a newer development of genre? If that latter is true, is the collectivist approach an attempt at reconsidering Latin American literature?

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  2. I'm curious to know if testimonios came into popularity during a certain historical period or with political/social influences. The use of multiple languages and the "collective experience" suggests, to me, that these autobiographies are meant to unite minorities in the face of adversity or oppression. While I haven't heard too much about this genre before, it will be interesting in the coming future to see if more testimonios are published given the current political climate.

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  3. Hey guys,

    From my understanding, testimonio is a relatively new genre. My research suggests that it began to develop after the Cuban Revolution in the 1960s. However, it didn't become as popular as it is today until around the 1990s. At this point, university scholars began recognizing its worth and value. I would say that testimonio is a collectivist approach at reclaiming a particular culture, as opposed to reconsidering literature. However, testimonio writing often resembles other forms of storytelling, specifically oral histories, that are very familiar for many Latinx cultures.

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