El artículo busca entender el gran poder que la sensibilidad de Silva obtuvo sobre su ciudad natal, explorando
algunos de los principales sentimientos que le permitieron alcanzar un lugar paradigmático
dentro de los linderos auto-reflexivos de Guayaquil. Propone que varias generaciones de guayaquileños
han utilizado a Silva como un espejo de múltiples niveles para reflejar sus complicadas imágenes de ausencia,
pesadillas coloniales y las formas institucionales de un rechazo civilizador.
The article looks to assess the particular power that Silva’s sensibility came to have over his city of origin,
exploring what are some of the major sentiments or tropes that enabled Silva’s paradigmatic place
in the city’s understanding of itself and its way of being? What are some of the major effects of sentiments
that catapulted themselves again and again to the city’s multiple generations? The article also explores
how these same effects of sentiments would contribute to Silva’s high regard in the official culture,
and evidences the fact that Silva’s iconic figure has continuously and historically reflected the city’s
own ambivalence over its own questions of origins and identity. Finally, the article poses that in Silva,
fleeing streams of Guayaquilean generations have had a mirror with myriad levels of realities upon which
to reflect their own bitter truths of un-belonging, colonial nightmares, and rejecting consequences of
civilizing manners and norms.