The Significance and Impact of Gregorio Marañón

The Significance and Impact of Gregorio Marañón
Author: Gary D. Keller
Publisher: Bilingual Review Press (AZ)
Total Pages: 370
Release: 1977
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

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This volume analyzes the literary and historical oeuvre of Maranon and places him in historical perspective. Maranon was an independent discoverer of infantile sexuality and in fact incorporated several Freudian concepts into his work. Don Juan (the legend) and Don Juanism were also a major source of speculation for Maranon. In a separate section on Maranon's theory of biography and notion of historiography, Keller analyzes the physician's ideas and contrasts them with the theories of other historians and biographers such as J. Vicens Vives and Andre Maurois.

The Significance and Impact of Gregorio Maranon

The Significance and Impact of Gregorio Maranon
Author: Gary D. Keller
Publisher: Bilingual Review Press
Total Pages: 310
Release: 1977-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780916950187

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This volume analyzes the literary and historical oeuvre of Maranon and places him in historical perspective. Maranon was an independent discoverer of infantile sexuality and in fact incorporated several Freudian concepts into his work. Don Juan (the legend) and Don Juanism were also a major source of speculation for Maranon. In a separate section on Maranon's theory of biography and notion of historiography, Keller analyzes the physician's ideas and contrasts them with the theories of other historians and biographers such as J. Vicens Vives and Andre Maurois.

The Aesthetics of Emotion

The Aesthetics of Emotion
Author: Gerald C. Cupchik
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 415
Release: 2016-07-28
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 1107024455

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Argues that relations between mind and body are analogous to those between subject matter and style in art.

Women’s Work

Women’s Work
Author: Rebecca Ingram
Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
Total Pages: 291
Release: 2022-09-15
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 0826504914

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Winner, Gourmand World Cookbook Awards, 2023—Best Women of the World Book, Spain We are living in a moment in which famous chefs, Michelin stars, culinary techniques, and gastronomical accolades attract moneyed tourists to Spain from all over the world. This has prompted the Spanish government to declare its cuisine as part of Spanish patrimony. Even with this widespread global attention, we know little about how Spanish cooking became a litmus test for demonstrating Spain's modernity and, relatedly, the roles ascribed to the modern Spanish women responsible for daily cooking. Efforts to articulate a new, modern Spain infiltrated writing in multiple genres and media. Women's Work offers a sharp reading of diverse sources, placed in their historical context, that yields a better understanding of the roles of food within an inherently uneven modernization process. Further, author Rebecca Ingram's perceptive critique reveals the paradoxical messages women have navigated, even in texts about a daily practice that shaped their domestic and work lives. Women's Work posits that this is significant because of the degree to which domestic activities, including cooking, occupied women's daily lives, even while issues like their fitness as citizens and participation in the public sphere were hotly debated. At the same time, progressive intellectuals from diverse backgrounds began to invoke Spanish cooking and eating as one measure of Spanish modernity. Women's Work shows how culinary writing engaged these debates and reached women at the site of much of their daily labor—the kitchen—and, in this way, shaped their thinking about their roles in modernizing Spain.

On Resentment

On Resentment
Author: Dolores Martin Moruno
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 310
Release: 2013-07-16
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1443850144

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Resentment has a history. Paintings such as Géricault’s Le Radeau de La Méduse, nineteenth-century women’s manifestos and WWI war photographs provide but a few examples to retrace the changing physiognomy of this emotion from the second half of the eighteenth century up to our contemporary society. The essays in this collection attempt to shed light on the historical evolution of this affective experience adopting the French Revolution as a “gravitational force”, namely as a moment in which the desire to be other was politically legitimised by means of the ideal of a meritocratic society. From Adam Smith’s definition as social passion linked with justice, to Nietzsche’s interpretation of resentment as a pathological symptom, this emotion has also shaped a plethora of social movements forging their identity out of hatred mixed with fear and indignation. This volume seeks to provide new insights into the history of emotions by showing how resentment is a cultural experience that contributes to a better understanding of the differences between the past and the present world.

The Poetry of Antonio Machado

The Poetry of Antonio Machado
Author: Xon de Ros
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 293
Release: 2015
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 0198736800

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This book offers a much needed reappraisal of a major twentieth-century Spanish poet, Antonio Machado (1875-1939), offering compelling arguments why his poetry should have a more vital profile not only within the precincts of Hispanism but also alongside the most significant twentieth-century poets of Europe and America, seeking to open up new perspectives for the interpretation of his poetry. The unifying concepts, as the title suggests, are landscape and transformation. Landscape, a topic barely broached in Spanish poetry before Machado, is a central thematic concern in his poetry.

The Spanish Flu

The Spanish Flu
Author: R. Davis
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 266
Release: 2013-08-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 1137339217

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The 1918 Spanish flu epidemic is now widely recognized as the most devastating disease outbreak in recorded history. This cultural history reconstructs Spaniards' experience of the flu and traces the emergence of various competing narratives that arose in response to bacteriology's failure to explain and contain the disease's spread.

The Theatre of García Lorca

The Theatre of García Lorca
Author: Paul Julian Smith
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 210
Release: 1998-05-28
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780521622929

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A study of the plays of García Lorca, the greatest Spanish dramatist of the twentieth century.