Daniel Link might object to the label, but he is indeed a public intellectual of the most traditional sorts. His public interventions are scattered across a variety of mediums, from novels to literary criticism, blogs and weekly newspaper columns, and though diffuse they form a net that Link casts about to capture the elusive nature of the “contemporary”.
By turns authoritative and provocative, highly erudite and risqué, Link manages to bridge the divide between institutional respect as chair of 20th Century Literature at the University of Buenos Aires (UBA) and champion for the young, the marginal, and iconoclastic. Amid his frenetic schedule of conferences, teaching, and writing, Link was kind enough to speak with Argentina Independent about contemporary Argentine literature, the creative uses of obsolete technology, and how “good literature” is passé.
Entrevista de Nicolas Allen para The Argentina Independent
You’re currently director of the program Estudios Literarios
Latinoamericanos in the UNTREF (Universidad Nacional Tres de Febrero).
How are you thinking these days about “Latin American literature”,
particularly contemporary Latin American literature. Is there something
about the present moment that led you to establish the program?
In the last few years I’ve been thinking more and more obsessively
about the “Latin America issue” and in my last book of essays,
Fantasmas, I outlined the coordinates for that obsession (which
included, like the stories of Borges or the Name of the Rose, a “missing
book”). The last section of ‘Fantasmas’ (‘Ghosts’) is a probing
interrogation of that issue that coincides, I feel, with the
turn-of-the-century, and, therefore, with a paradigm change from the
Cuban dilemma to the Bolivarian trilemma [ed. The interviewee is
here referring to a shift away from dualisms typical of the 20th
century, i.e. liberation vs dependence; civilisation vs barbarism, etc.,
to a more contemporary regional and multi-polar vision of the world].
It seems to me that the experience of Chavismo in Venezuela
(independent of the opinion one might form about that government) has
obligated us to think about Latin America along new lines, or along
lines that were already there, but had not been sufficiently examined,
like MERCOSUR, whose fundamental milestone was the expansionary model of
Alfonsin’s Republic.
Then, there are always the relations of friendship and fascination
(in my case, for Brazil, Mexico, and the Andean cultures). Not so much a
question of identification – I have nothing in common with those
traditions – as one of desire. Why am I drawn to that which I am not?
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