Hyperglossia and the Novel

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A01=Elidio La Torre Lagares
Author_Elidio La Torre Lagares
Category=DSBH
Category=DSK
Category=DSM
comparative literature
contemporary novel
digital textuality
Edmundo Paz Soldan
epistemic drift
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Flights
Giannina Braschi
hauntology
Iris
Latin American literature
literary maximalism
Maryse Conde
narrative disintegration
Olga Tocarckzuk
ontological saturation in fiction
poststructuralist theory
Roberto Bolano
spacial theory
The United States of Banana

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032976228
  • Weight: 570g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Dec 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Hyperglossia and the Novel: The Production of (Non) Space theorizes hyperglossia as a critical threshold in literary, philosophical, and media discourse— an excessive, recursive textual force that resists closure, coherence, and containment. Drawing from Bakhtin, Derrida, Foucault, Glissant, and Morton, this work constructs an interdisciplinary topology where narrative is displaced by semiotic proliferation. Through readings of Tokarczuk, Bolaño, Braschi, Paz Soldán, and Condé, the book explores how post- narrative texts perform ontological saturation, linguistic instability, and hauntological displacement. Hyperglossia is not a mere excess of language; it is a dispositif, a mechanism of epistemic drift and resistance that destabilizes the relation between text, space, and subject. Engaging literary maximalism, posthumanism, colonial hauntings, and digital textuality, this book maps a poetics of rupture— a world where language spills into non- space and refuses the end. Rather than offering synthesis, it proposes a drift: a movement toward meaning that cannot be finalized, only continually reinscribed.

Elidio La Torre Lagares is a writer, scholar, and professor in the Department of Comparative Literature at the University of Puerto Rico. He holds a PhD in Puerto Rican and Hispanic- American literature and an MFA in creative writing from the University of Texas at El Paso. His research explores hyperglossia, dispositif theory, and post- narrative textualities, with a focus on Latin American, Caribbean, and World Literature. A prolific author, his publications span poetry, fiction, and academic essays, including Wonderful Wasteland and Other Natural Disasters (2019) and Aguacerando (2025). He has presented widely at international conferences and has served as a mentor and thesis advisor in multiple graduate programs. His work bridges literary experimentation and critical theory, engaging with questions of identity, space, and excess in contemporary literature. He is also the founder of the MFA in creative writing at the University of Puerto Rico.

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