Results 221 to 230 of about 1,411 (250)
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On the Archaeological Impulse in Contemporary Spanish Narrative Fiction
Bulletin of Spanish Studies, 2011Abstract The essay elaborates how Benjamin Prado's Mala gente que camina (2007) deploys an archaeological-historical methodology to uncover a largely unknown practice during Spain's postwar years: the removal of babies and children from Republican prisoners of war and their adoption by families sympathetic to Franco's regime.
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Language style in the negotiation of class identity in translated contemporary Spanish fiction
Babel. Revue internationale de la traduction / International Journal of Translation, 2018Abstract In the early novels of the Carvalho detective series by Manuel Vázquez Montalbán, set in the years of Spain’s transition to democracy, the negotiation of identities and political stance are paramount characterization resources.
Espunya, Anna, Pavić Pintarić, Anita
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At the Margins of the Nation: Chinese Immigrants in Contemporary Spanish American Fiction
Amerasia Journal, 2012Twentieth-century authors Ines Arredondo (Mexico), Antonio Ortega (Spain/Cuba) and Santiago MacKay (Panama) depict Chinese diasporic subjects as outsiders by underlining their displacement, voicelessness and unassimilability. By and large Chinese immigrants in Latin America have been excluded from most national discourses of mestizaje (miscegenation ...
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Journal of Modern Jewish Studies, 2016
ABSTRACTThe expulsion of the Jews from the Christian kingdoms of Castile and Aragon in 1492 by Isabel I of Castile and Fernando II of Aragon is an event from Spain’s mediaeval past that continues to stimulate scholarly controversy. It is one of the most sensitive issues in Spanish historiography, alongside the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939).
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ABSTRACTThe expulsion of the Jews from the Christian kingdoms of Castile and Aragon in 1492 by Isabel I of Castile and Fernando II of Aragon is an event from Spain’s mediaeval past that continues to stimulate scholarly controversy. It is one of the most sensitive issues in Spanish historiography, alongside the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939).
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Haunted by Colonial Dreams: Contemporary Fiction on the Spanish Colonization of the Maghreb
2012Ignacio Echevarria’s review of Lorenzo Silva’s Carta Blanca, winner of the 2004 Premio Primavera, begins with the critic’s sarcastic complaint about the pervasive sense of deja vu that the Spanish literary prizes inspire in him. The problem is that he recycles the scenery and historical episodes that Lorenzo Silva had used before (i.e.
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postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies, 2016
Historical fiction has been a boom genre in Spanish publishing for many years. One of the most popular periods represented in such novels is the late medieval period, that is, the later centuries of the Christian Reconquest leading up to the momentous events of 1492.
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Historical fiction has been a boom genre in Spanish publishing for many years. One of the most popular periods represented in such novels is the late medieval period, that is, the later centuries of the Christian Reconquest leading up to the momentous events of 1492.
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Contemporary Spanish Film from Fiction
Hispania, 2002Malcolm Alan Compitello +1 more
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Feminine Concerns in Contemporary Spanish Fiction by Women
Hispania, 1989Margaret E. W. Jones +3 more
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