Twentieth-Century Spain

Twentieth-Century Spain

Author: Julián Casanova

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2014-07-03

Total Pages: 401

ISBN-13: 1139992007

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This is a much-needed new overview of Spanish social and political history which sets developments in twentieth-century Spain within a broader European context. Julián Casanova, one of Spain's leading historians, and Carlos Gil Andrés chart the country's experience of democracy, dictatorship and civil war and its dramatic transformation from an agricultural and rural society to an industrial and urban society fully integrated into Europe. They address key questions and issues that continue to be discussed and debated in contemporary historiography, such as why the Republic was defeated, why Franco's dictatorship lasted so long and what mark it has left on contemporary Spain. This is an essential book for students as well as for anyone interested in Spain's turbulent twentieth century.


Spanish Cultural Studies

Spanish Cultural Studies

Author: Helen Graham

Publisher: Oxford University Press on Demand

Published: 1995

Total Pages: 455

ISBN-13: 9780198151999

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This work adopts an interdisciplinary approach in its study of 20th-century Spanish culture and society, emphasizing contemporary developments. The contributors take into account major recent changes which have taken place in the context of higher education Spanish studies.


Poetry, Physics, and Painting in Twentieth-Century Spain

Poetry, Physics, and Painting in Twentieth-Century Spain

Author: C. Gala

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2011-11-18

Total Pages: 409

ISBN-13: 1137002182

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This book reads the work of Salinas, Guillén, Larrea, Diego, Alberti, Méndez, and Lorca in analogical relation with Cubism and with the revolutionary discoveries of modern physics. Gala advances traditional criticism by considering these artists in the broader cultural context of Spain, Europe, and European Modernism.


Madness, Love and Tragedy in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Spain

Madness, Love and Tragedy in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Spain

Author: Marta Manrique Gomez

Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Published: 2014-01-16

Total Pages: 130

ISBN-13: 1443856096

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How do Spanish writers of the 19th and 20th century define and represent madness, a basic and controversial aspect of world culture, and how do the different conceptions of madness intersect with love, religion, politics, and other literary themes in Spanish society? This multi-author book analyzes the theme of madness in formative masterpieces of Spanish literature of the 19th and 20th century through the use of relevant critical and theoretical approaches. In this context, authors studied in this book include Juan Valera, Leopoldo Alas Clarín, Emilia Pardo Bazán, Caterina Albert, Benito Pérez Galdós, Miguel de Unamuno, and Juan Goytisolo, among others.


The Spanish Literary Generation of 1968

The Spanish Literary Generation of 1968

Author: William M. Sherzer

Publisher: University Press of America

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 177

ISBN-13: 0761857990

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This book focuses on three authors coming of age at an important moment in Spanish literary history and in world history at large. These authors incorporated into their novels the new ideas that they found in the writing of many foreign authors that were essential to their development.


Juan Goytisolo

Juan Goytisolo

Author: Alison Ribeiro de Menezes

Publisher: Tamesis Books

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 222

ISBN-13: 9781855661097

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This book assesses Goytisolo's contribution to cultural debates in Spain since the sixties and revises the prevailing critical interpretation of his fiction, arguing that his works represent an ethical engagement with postmodernist theory rather than an illustration of it. This monograph offers two new perspectives on Spanish writer, Juan Goytisolo. First, under the themes of authorship and dissidence, it integrates his writing across several genres, providing a rounded assessment of his contribution to cultural debates in Spain since the sixties and arguing that resistance to repressive discourses characterizes his essays and autobiographies as much as his fiction. Second, it revises the prevailing critical interpretation of Goytisolo's fiction by building on four premises: that his novels are less clearly oppositional than prevailing interpretations imply; that, in order to engage with discourses of identity, he employs an idiom which, contrary to his own statements, is not a poststructuralist autonomous world of words; that a textual practice grounded in the recognizable experience of post-Civil War Spain, rather than one which seeks out the realm of pure textuality, is essential to Goytisolo's subversive political intentions; and that the autobiographical element of much of his work constitutes a more complex narrative aesthetic than has been appreciated. The book argues that ifGoytisolo's work is interpreted as an ethical engagement with postmodernist theory, rather than as an illustration of it, then certain contradictions for which he has been criticized are seen in a new and valuable light. ALISON RIBEIRO DE MENEZES is a Senior Lecturer in Spanish at University College Dublin.