The Nineteenth-century Spanish Story

The Nineteenth-century Spanish Story
Title The Nineteenth-century Spanish Story PDF eBook
Author Lou Charnon-Deutsch
Publisher Tamesis Books
Pages 190
Release 1985
Genre Fiction
ISBN 9780729302135

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Nineteenth-Century Spanish America

Nineteenth-Century Spanish America
Title Nineteenth-Century Spanish America PDF eBook
Author Christopher Conway
Publisher Vanderbilt University Press
Pages 365
Release 2015-07-14
Genre History
ISBN 0826503713

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Nineteenth-Century Spanish America: A Cultural History provides a panoramic and accessible introduction to the era in which Latin America took its first steps into the Modern Age. Including colorful characters like circus clowns, prostitutes, bullfighters, street puppeteers, and bestselling authors, this book maps vivid and often surprising combinations of the new and the old, the high and the low, and the political and the cultural. Christopher Conway shows that beneath the diversity of the New World there was a deeper structure of shared patterns of cultural creation and meaning. Whether it be the ways that people of refinement from different countries used the same rules of etiquette, or how commoners shared their stories through the same types of songs, Conway creates a multidisciplinary framework for understanding the culture of an entire hemisphere. The book opens with key themes that will help students and scholars understand the century, such as the civilization and barbarism binary, urbanism, the divide between conservatives and liberals, and transculturation. In the chapters that follow, Conway weaves transnational trends together with brief case studies and compelling snapshots that help us understand the period. How much did books and photographs cost in the nineteenth century? What was the dominant style in painting? What kinds of ballroom dancing were popular? Richly illustrated with striking photographs and lithographs, this is a book that invites the reader to rediscover a past age that is not quite past, still resonating into the present.

Nineteenth-century Spain

Nineteenth-century Spain
Title Nineteenth-century Spain PDF eBook
Author Mark Lawrence
Publisher Routledge
Pages 0
Release 2020
Genre HISTORY
ISBN 9780815351061

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Nineteenth century Spain deserves wider readership. This new history, the first survey of its kind in English in more than a hundred years, offers a fresh perspective on this century, showing how and why elements of backwardness and modernity ran in parallel through Spain.

Spanish Stories of the Late Nineteenth Century

Spanish Stories of the Late Nineteenth Century
Title Spanish Stories of the Late Nineteenth Century PDF eBook
Author Stanley Appelbaum
Publisher Courier Corporation
Pages 242
Release 2012-12-06
Genre Foreign Language Study
ISBN 0486120686

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These 11 tales — published between 1870 and 1900 — are by 4 outstanding authors who brought new life to Spanish literature: Juan Valera, Pedro Antonio de Alarcón, Leopoldo Alas ("Clarín"), and Emilia Pardo Bazán.

Stories of Enchantment from Nineteenth-century Spain

Stories of Enchantment from Nineteenth-century Spain
Title Stories of Enchantment from Nineteenth-century Spain PDF eBook
Author
Publisher The Rosen Publishing Group
Pages 296
Release 2002
Genre Fiction
ISBN 9780838755334

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This volume consists of seventeen stories by nine of nineteenth-century Spain's most well-known authors, and demonstrates convinvingly that, although it had no Charles Perrault and no brothers Grimm, it maintained a rich oral vein of folktales and fostered stories in written form that are in keeping with the European tradition.

The Theatre in Nineteenth-Century Spain

The Theatre in Nineteenth-Century Spain
Title The Theatre in Nineteenth-Century Spain PDF eBook
Author David Thatcher Gies
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 408
Release 1994-08-11
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0521380464

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This is the first comprehensive study of the theatre of nineteenth-century Spain, a most important genre which produced more than 10,000 plays during the course of the century. David Gies assesses this mass of material - much of it hitherto unknown - as text, spectacle, and social phenomenon. His book sheds light on political drama during Napoleonic times, the theatre of dictatorship (1820s), Romanticism, women dramatists, socialist drama, neo-Romantic drama, the relationship between parody and the dominant literary currents of the day, and the challenging work of Galdós. A chapter on the battle to create a National Theatre reveals the deep conflicts generated by the various interested factions in the middle of the century. This readable account will at last allow students and scholars properly to re-evaluate the canon of texts.

Pascual de Gayangos

Pascual de Gayangos
Title Pascual de Gayangos PDF eBook
Author Cristina Alvarez Millan
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Pages 264
Release 2008-11-03
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0748635483

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Pascual de Gayangos (1809-97) celebrated Spanish Orientalist and polymath, is recognised as the father of the modern school of Arabic studies in Spain. He gave Islamic Spain its own voice, for the first time representing Spain's 'other' from 'within' not from without. This collection, the first major study of Gayangos, celebrates the 200th anniversary of his birth.Covering a wide range of subjects, it reflects the multiple fields in which Gayangos was involved: scholarship on the culture of Islamic and Christian Spain; history, literature, art; conservation and preservation of national heritage; formation of archives and collections; education; tourism; diplomacy and politics. Amalgamating and understanding Gayangos's multiple identities, it reinstates his importance for cultural life in nineteenth-century Spain, Britain and North America.It is also argued that Gayangos's scholarly achievements and his influence have a political dimension. His work must be seen in relation to the quest for a national identity which marked the nineteenth century: what was the significance of Spain's Islamic past, and the Imperial Golden Age to the culture of modern Spain? The chapters, informed by post-colonial theory, reception theory and theories of national identity, uncover some of the complexities of the process that shaped Spain's national identity. In the course of this book, Gayangos is shown to be a figure with many facets and several intellectual lives: Arabist, historian, liberal, researcher, editor, numismatist, traveller, translator, diplomat, perhaps a spy, a generous collaborator and one of Spain's greatest bibliophiles.