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The Jewish Contribution to Argentine Literature

Hispania, 1950
During the final years of the sixteenth and the first part of the seventeenth centuries, many Spanish and Portuguese Jews secretly undertook the hazardous voyage to Argentina in order to escape the Inquisition, and portugu6s, like ruso in contemporary Argentina, became synonymous with Jew.1 We have documentary evidence that for many years large numbers
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Argentine Literature

2018
Argentine literature is somewhat of an outlier among the major productions of Latin America, having its roots neither in the culture associated with the great Spanish and Portuguese empire viceroyalties (centered in Mexico City, Lima, Bogotá, Havana, and Rio de Janeiro) nor in multifaceted contacts with indigenous cultures, some of them empires in ...
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Women and Power in Argentine Literature

2007
Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter One: Elvira Orphee The Author and Her Work Conversation with Elvira Orphee "Justice Shall Be Done" Publications and Translations Chapter Two: Angelica Gorodischer The Author and Her Work Conversation with Angelica Gorodischer "How to Succeed in Life" Publications and Translations Chapter Three: Marcela Sola The ...
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The Indian in Romantic Literature of the Argentine

Modern Philology, 1958
exotic past, now gone forever, can be observed in the works of numerous authors of the first period of the Romantic era in Argentine literature: Juan Maria Gutierrez, with his Indians of legend and idyl; Pedro Bermuidez, with his play El Charri'a about idealized Indians of the past; Vicente Fidel L6pez, with his historical novel La Novia del hereje ...
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‘Black letters’: problems and issues in the research, dissemination and reception of literature by Afro-Argentines and on Afro-Argentines

African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal, 2014
Afro-Argentines of colonial descent constitute one of the lesser known minority groups in the country. While scholarly research on this particular group is still scarce, recent studies account for the diversity of its past and current cultural practices.
Norberto Pablo Cirio   +1 more
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Introduction: Gendered Spaces in Argentine Women’s Literature

2012
A mysterious tree planted in the middle of the desert; the roaring fire in the nearby pajonal; the dense silence disrupted only by wild sounds of strange birds and animals; the unchanged appearance of the desert. Such are the powerful spatial images that populate the pages of La cautiva, the poem that Esteban Echeverria published in 1837.
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Literature and Society: Madame de Stael and the Argentine Romantics

Hispania, 1985
The study of Latin-American literature in its romantic age must include recognition of a fundamental debt to European letters of the same period. The new Southern republics that came into existence between 1810 and 1824 were inheritors of a wide-reaching revolutionary spirit that rose in North America in 1776, consumed France in 1789 and engulfed Spain
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Research Guide to Argentine Literature

Books Abroad, 1971
Warren L. Meinhardt   +2 more
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