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Moveable Margins
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 350

Moveable Margins

The second section contains ten critical essays that apply widely varying critical approaches that range from feminist, psycho-analytical, formalist, poststructuralist, new historical, and intertextual to postmodern and postcolonial. The volume also features Riera's hitherto unpublished play in the Catalan original and in English translation. This book will appeal to those interested in twentieth-century Peninsular literature, comparative literature, feminist criticism, gender studies, and cultural studies.

Genre Fusion
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 252

Genre Fusion

" Genre Fusion demonstrates how Spanish authors accurately represent the lived experience of Spain's history and collective memory by overlapping the genres of fiction and historiography."

Journal of the Institute of Romance Studies
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 380

Journal of the Institute of Romance Studies

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2000
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

White Ink
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 174

White Ink

An analysis of the use made of five structuring devices, or motifs -- the Bildungsroman, the patriarchal prison, the fairy tale, sexual politics and gender trouble --in a selection of representative women's novels from Spain and Latin America written between 1936 and the present. STEPHEN M. HART is Reader in the Department of Spanish and Latin American Studies at University College London.

Approaches to Teaching the Works of Carmen Martín Gaite
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 207

Approaches to Teaching the Works of Carmen Martín Gaite

The career of Spain's celebrated author Carmen Martín Gaite spanned the Spanish Civil War, Franco's dictatorship, and the nation's transition to democracy. She wrote fiction, poetry, drama, screenplays for television and film, and books of literary and cultural analysis. The only person to win Spain's National Prize for Literature (Premio Nacional de las Letras) twice, Martín Gaite explored and blended a range of genres, from social realism to the fantastic, as she took up issues of gender, class, economics, and aesthetics in a time of political upheaval. Part 1 ("Materials") of this volume provides resources for instructors and a literary-historical chronology. The essays in part 2 ("Approaches") consider Martín Gaite's best-known novel, The Back Room (El cuarto de atrás), and other works from various perspectives: narratological, feminist, sociocultural, stylistic. In an appendix, the volume editor, who was a friend of the author, provides a new translation of Martín Gaite's only autobiographical sketch, alongside the original Spanish.

The Same Sea as Every Summer
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 216

The Same Sea as Every Summer

A middle-aged woman who returns to the apartment in Barcelona where she grew up comes to terms with her past and her sexuality in a relationship with another woman

Beyond the Metafictional Mode
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 192

Beyond the Metafictional Mode

The term metafiction invaded the vocabulary of literary criticism around 1970, yet the textual strategies involved in turning fiction back onto itself can be traced through several centuries. In this theoretical/critical study Robert C. Spires examines the nature of metafiction and chronicles its evolution in Spain from the time of Cervantes to the 1970s, when the obsession with novelistic self-commentary culminated in an important literary movement. The critical portions of this study focus primarily on twentieth-century works. Included are analyses of Unamuno's Niebla, Jarnés's Locura y muerte de nadie and La novia del viento, Torrente Ballester's Don Juan, Cunquiero's Un hombre que se pa...

The Cuban Condition
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 200

The Cuban Condition

Firmat explores the process of assimilation or transculturation in the case of Cuba, and proposes a new understanding of the issue of Cuban national identity through revisionary readings dating from the early decades of the twentieth century, a time of intense self-reflection in the nation's history. He argues that Cuban identity is translational rather than foundational and that cubanía emerges from a nuanced, self-conscious recasting of foreign models.

Voices of Their Own
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 264

Voices of Their Own

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1991
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Private Correspondence
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 150

Private Correspondence

Esther Tusquets was already well known in Spain as director of the Barcelona publishing house Editorial Lumen when she stunned the reading public in the late 70s and 80s with the publication of a highly acclaimed narrative cycle whose daringly innovative content and prose style broke new ground for the Spanish novel and for women's writing.