From Moscow to Madrid

From Moscow to Madrid
Author: Ewa Mazierska
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2002-10-24
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0857712772

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Travelling from Warsaw to Blackpool, Marseilles to Madrid, this lively and accessible book investigates the postmodern nature of contemporary Europe's urban life and cinema and shows how European films represent the cities across old and new Europe. Interdisciplinary in approach, the text engages with diverse films, including "Luna Park", "Run, Lola, Run", "Trainspotting", "Wonderland" and many more. It tackles the issues of postmodernity raised by these films and the changes wrought in European cities since the 1980s under the effects of political change, from the post-communist era in Moscow and Berlin to the effects of Thatcherism in Edinburgh and London.

Spain

Spain
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 636
Release: 1937
Genre: Spain
ISBN:

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Report of the Federal Security Agency

Report of the Federal Security Agency
Author: United States. Office of Education
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1300
Release: 1903
Genre: Education
ISBN:

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Madrid's Forgotten Avant-Garde

Madrid's Forgotten Avant-Garde
Author: Silvina Schammah Gesser
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Total Pages: 503
Release: 2016-04-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1836241909

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This book explores the role played by artists and intellectuals who constructed and disseminated various competing images of national identity which polarized Spanish society prior to the Civil War. The convergence of modern and essentialist discourses and practices, especially in literature and poetry, in what is conventionally called in Spanish letters "The Generation of '27", created fissures between competing views of aesthetics and ideology that cut across political affiliation. Silvina Schammah exposes the paradoxes facing Madrid's cultural vanguards, as they were torn by their ambition for universality, cosmopolitanism and transcendence on the one hand and by the centripetal forces of nationalistic ideologies on the other. Taking upon themselves roles to become the disseminators and populizers of radical positions and world-views first elaborated and conducted by the young urban intelligentsia, their proposed aim of incorporating diverse identities embedded in different cultural constructions and discourse was to have very real and tragic consequences as political and intellectual lines polarized in the years prior to the Spanish Civil War.