Details
First Published: 20 Nov 2008
13 Digit ISBN: 9781855661745
Pages: 356
Size: 23.4 x 15.6
Binding: Hardback
Imprint: Tamesis Books
Series: Monografías A
Subject:
Hispanic StudiesBIC Class: GTB
Details updated on 07 Sep 2010
Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 From Local to Global History. The Spanish Novel in the Twentieth Century
- 3 New Trends in the Early Twentieth-Century Novel
- 4 Tales from the Avant-Garde
- 5 From Experiment to Experience: The Social Realist Novel
- 6 The Novel of the Spanish Civil War: From Militancy to Reconciliation
- 7 Demythification in the Novels of Luis Martín-Santos and Juan Goytisolo
- 8 Historical and Metahistorical Fiction in Post-Civil War and Democratic Spain
- 9 The Spanish Detective Novel as a Political Genre
- 10 Madrid in the Twentieth-Century Novel: Attempting to Describe a Moving Target
- 11 Fictional Mirrors of Barcelona (and Barcelonians)
- 12 Narrating Women in the Postwar Peninsular Novel
- 13 New Sexual and Gender Paradigms in Contemporary Spanish Fiction
- 14 Disquieting Realism: Postmodern and Beyond
- 15 Cultural Warfare at the End of the Millennium: The Anti-conformist Fiction of the Spanish 'Generation X'
- 16 Film, Politics and the Novel
- 17 The Catalan Novel and the Evaporation of Modernity
- 18 The Galician Novel: An Eternal Work in Progress
- 19 The Evolution of Basque Fiction in the Twentieth Century
This collection of studies by eighteen prominent theorists and critics offers a diverse panorama of the modern Spanish novel seen through the prism of Spain's recent political, cultural and ideological history. It considers the development of the novel as a social mirror and as a changing literary form, torn between the tradition of stern realism and the aesthetics of rupture affecting all Western literature from the Avant-Garde to the Postmodern age. While some essays emphasise the Spanish cultural context and canonical writers, others are of a broader nature, grouping lesser-known writers under certain literary tendencies: the metaphysical novel, the urban novel, recuperative accounts of the Civil War, feminine first-person narrations, and the rise of the popular detective, historical, and erotic novels. Three studies address the resurgence of the Catalan, Basque and Galician novel and their departure from a poetics of identity to one of global concerns. Interdisciplinary approaches address the reciprocal impacts of literature and cinema, and the effects of the marketplace on the consumption of fiction are not forgotten. The Companion provides ample bibliographies and a valuable chronology, while all titles and quotations are translated into English.
Contributors: Marta E. Altisent, Katarzyna Olga Beilin, Ramón Buckley, José F. Colmeiro, Stacey Dolgin Casado, Sebastiaan Faber, David K. Herzberger, Carlos Alex Longhurst, Kathleen N. March, Cristina Martínez-Carazo, Alfredo Martínez Expósito, Nina L. Molinaro, Gonzalo Navajas, Mari Jose Olaziregi, Janet D. Pérez, Randolph D. Pope, Josep Miquel Sobrer, H. Rosi Song.