fragmentista
Fragmentista is a term used in literary and art criticism to describe a writer, artist, or theorist who foregrounds fragmentation as a central technique or epistemological stance. The word derives from fragment, with the agentive suffix -ista, common in Romance languages. In practice, a fragmentista produces works made of fragments—isolated passages, aphorisms, abrupt juxtapositions, or non-contiguous scenes—instead of a single linear narrative or argument. The form often aims to invite multiple readings, undermine authorial authority, and reflect the fragmentary experience of memory, identity, or society.
In literature and poetry, fragmentistas may assemble texts from disparate sources, employ cut-ups, or present collage-like
Critically, fragmentism is valued for its openness and plurality, yet it can be criticized for appearing obscure
See also: fragmentation, montage, fragmentary novel, postmodernism, cut-up technique.