Las novelas de Torquemada

Las novelas de Torquemada
Author: Benito Pérez Galdós
Publisher:
Total Pages: 658
Release: 1976
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

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Las cuatro obras de Benito Pérez Galdós (1843-1920) agrupadas en este volumen bajo el título de LAS NOVELAS DE TORQUEMADA tienen en común la figura de su protagonista y el marco histórico de la España de la Restauración. El núcleo dramático de «Torquemada en la hoguera» es la conmoción espiritual que la grave enfermedad de su hijo produce en el prestamista; «Torquemada en la cruz», «Torquemada en el Purgatorio» y «Torquemada y San Pedro» narran el vertiginoso ascenso social del antiguo usurero, que se convierte en marqués por su enlace matrimonial con una aristócrata arruinada, es nombrado senador del Reino y acumula una enorme fortuna mediante especulaciones financieras.

The Jew in the Novels of Benito Perez Galdos

The Jew in the Novels of Benito Perez Galdos
Author: Sara E. Schyfter
Publisher: Tamesis
Total Pages: 148
Release: 1978
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780729300506

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A study of Galdós' Jewish characters and what they tell us about the place of Jews in C19th Spanish society and culture. Few Spanish novelists have dealt with the problem of religion and religious commitment more comprehensively than Benito Pérez Galdós. His lifelong preoccupation with man in search of transendence repeatedly led him to evaluate andcriticize the religious institutions that stifled rather than helped man in his search. In the Jews, Galdós saw a people who, though victimized by religious intolerance, managed to survive persecution and affirm an abiding faithin God. He created Jewish characters throughout his long literary career and therefore presents the most comprehensive portrait of Jews as they existed in the culture, the religion and fabric of C19th Spanish society.

Galdos

Galdos
Author: Jo Labanyi
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 277
Release: 2014-01-14
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1317896513

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Benito Perez Galdos has been described as 'the greatest Spanish novelist since Cervantes.' His work constitutes a major contribution to the nineteenth-century novel, rivalling that of Dickens of Balzac and making him an essential candidate for any course on the fiction of the period. Jo Labanyi's study is supported by a wide-rangting introduction, a section of contemporary comment, headnotes to each piece and helpful appendix material.

The Sacred and Modernity in Urban Spain

The Sacred and Modernity in Urban Spain
Author: Antonio Cordoba
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2016-11-17
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1137600209

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This book explores how modernity, the urban, and the sacred overlap in fundamental ways in contemporary Spain. Urban spaces have traditionally been seen as the original sites of modernity, history, progress, and a Weberian systematic disenchantment of the world, while the sacred has been linked to the natural, the rural, mythical past origins, and exemption from historical change. This collection problematizes such clear-cut distinctions as overlaps between the modern urban and the sacred in Spanish culture are explored throughout the volume. Placed in the periphery of Europe, Spain has had a complex relationship with the concept of modernity and commonly understood processes of modernization and secularization, thus offering a unique case-study of the interaction between the modern and the sacred in the city.

Nonverbal Communication across Disciplines

Nonverbal Communication across Disciplines
Author: Fernando Poyatos
Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing
Total Pages: 309
Release: 2002-03-22
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 902729710X

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This volume, based on the first two, identifies the verbal and nonverbal personal and environmental components of narrative and dramaturgic texts and the cinema — recreated in the first through the ‘reading act’ according to gaze mechanism and punctuation — and traces the coding-decoding processes of the characters’ semiotic-communicative itinerary between writer-creator and reader-recreator. In our total experience of a play or film we depend on the sensory and intellectual relationships between performers, audience and the environment of both, in a temporal dimension starting on the way to the theater and ending as one comes out. Two chapters discuss the speaking face and body of the characters and the explicit and implicit (at times ‘unstageable’) paralanguage, kinesics and quasiparalinguistic and extrasomatic and environmental sounds in the novel, the theater and the cinema, and the functions of personal and environmental silences. Another shows the functions, limitations and problems of punctuation systems in the creative-recreative processes and how a few new symbols and modifications would avoid some ambiguities. The stylistic, communicative and technical functions of nonverbal repertoires in the literary text are then identified as enriching critical analysis and offering new perspectives in translation. Finally, ‘literary anthropology’ (developed by the author in the 1970s) is is presented as an interdisciplinary area based on synchronic and diachronic analyses of the literatures of the different cultures as a source of anthropological and ethnological data. Nearly 1200 quotes from 170 authors and 291 works are added to those in the first two volumes.

Masculine Figures

Masculine Figures
Author: Nicholas Wolters
Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
Total Pages: 402
Release: 2023-01-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 0826505198

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Based on years of archival research in Madrid and Barcelona, this interdisciplinary study offers a fresh approach to understanding how men visualized themselves and their place in a nation that struggled to modernize after nearly a century of civil war, colonial entanglement, and imperial loss. Masculine Figures is the first study to provide a comprehensive overview of competing models of masculinity in nineteenth-century Spain, and it is particularly novel in its treatment of Catalan texts and previously unstudied evidence (e.g., department store catalogs, commercial advertisements, fashion plates, and men’s tailoring journals). Fictional masculinity performs a symbolic role in representing and negotiating the contradictions male novelists often encountered in their attempts to professionalize not only as writers, but also as businessmen, professors, lawyers, and politicians. Through specific and recurring figures like the student, the priest, the businessman, and the heir, male novelists portray and represent an increasingly middle-class world at odds with the values and virtues it inherited from an imperial Spanish past, and those it imported from more industrialized nations like England and France. The visual culture of the time and place marks the material turn in middle-class masculinity and sets the stage for discussions of race and sexuality.