A Comparative History of Literatures in the Iberian Peninsula
Volume II
Editors
Volume 2 of A Comparative History of Literatures in the Iberian Peninsula brings to an end this collective work that aims at surveying the network of interliterary relations in the Iberian Peninsula. No attempt at such a comparative history of literatures in the Iberian Peninsula has been made until now. In this volume, the focus is placed on images (Section 1), genres (Section 2), forms of mediation (Section 3), and cultural studies and literary repertoires (Section 4). To these four sections an epilogue is added, in which specialists in literatures in the Iberian Peninsula, as well as in the (sub)disciplines of comparative history and comparative literary history, search for links between Volumes 1 and 2 from the point of view of general contributions to the field of Iberian comparative studies, and assess the entire project that now reaches completion with contributions from almost one hundred scholars.
This volume is part of a book set which can be ordered at a special discount: https://www.benjamins.com/series/chlel/chlel.special_offer_chlip.pdf
[Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages, XXIX] 2016. xiii, 765 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 4 October 2016
Published online on 4 October 2016
© John Benjamins B.V. / Association Internationale de Littérature Comparée
Table of Contents
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Presidential Preface to Vol. 2 of A Comparative History of Literatures in the Iberian PeninsulaKaren-Margrethe Lindskov Simonsen | pp. xi–xiii
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IntroductionCésar Domínguez, Anxo Abuín González and Ellen Sapega | pp. 1–4
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Section I. Images
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Inter(-in)ventions: Images of national identity in the literatures of the Iberian PeninsulaDorothy Odartey-Wellington | pp. 5–10
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Galician literature and the imaginary: Functions and problemsAntón Figueroa and Elias J. Feijo Torres | pp. 11–19
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“Catalonia is not Spain”: Images of self and other in Catalan literatureStewart King | pp. 20–31
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On the origins of images of gypsiesAraceli Cañadas Ortega | pp. 32–42
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The others in Golden Age dramaSantiago Fernández Mosquera | pp. 43–54
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Images of the “condemned” Europeans in the satiric works of Francisco de QuevedoIrene Bertuzzi | pp. 55–63
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Vulnerability and the literary imagination in the Basque context: Julia Otxoa, Bernardo Atxaga, and Luisa EtxenikeAnnabel Martín | pp. 64–73
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The odyssey of Spanish Jews: Un-homely SefaradDosinda Garcia-Alvite | pp. 74–86
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Self-images and hetero-images in Portuguese youth literatureFrancesca Blockeel | pp. 87–99
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Regional images and the struggle for life in Madrilenian literatureEnrique Fernández Rivera | pp. 100–111
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Newcomers and host nations: Literary images associated with immigrants in Spanish fictional narrativeDorothy Odartey-Wellington | pp. 112–124
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Section II. Genres
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Introduction: Laws and (inter-)textsMaria Fernanda de Abreu | pp. 125–130
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Sefer ha-meshalim and the status of poetry in medieval IberiaIsabelle Levy | pp. 131–137
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Pastoral. The pastoral romanceMaria do Céu Fraga | pp. 138–154
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Books of chivalry: Outline of a genreIsabel Almeida | pp. 155–170
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The sonnet in the Iberian Peninsula in the sixteenth centuryXosé Manuel Dasilva | pp. 171–183
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The picaresque in Iberia and America (nineteenth to twentieth century)Maria Fernanda de Abreu | pp. 184–199
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Religious and literary canons: Interferences and dissociations (sixteenth to eighteenth century)Zulmira C. Santos | pp. 200–205
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The historical novelMaria de Fátima Marinho | pp. 206–216
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The paths of a national idea of theatre in the Iberian PeninsulaJosé Camões and Maria João Brilhante | pp. 217–239
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The novel of adultery in Peninsular realist narrativeElena Losada Soler | pp. 240–255
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Writing of the self. Iberian diary writingEnric Bou and Heike Scharm Cannon | pp. 256–267
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Texts and images in contemporary Spanish children’s literatureEuriell Gobbé-Mévellec | pp. 268–281
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The essayEnric Bou and Ángel Otero-Blanco | pp. 282–292
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Section III. Forms of mediation
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Forms of mediation in the history of the literatures in the Iberian PeninsulaCesc Esteve and María José Vega | pp. 293–306
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Imitatio, rewriting and tradition: Shields in Iberian epicsLara Vilà | pp. 307–318
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Translation and cultural mediation in the fifteenth-century Hispanic kingdoms: The case of the Catalan-speaking landsJosep Pujol | pp. 319–326
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Paratexts and mediation: The case of Ausiàs March in the sixteenth centuryCesc Esteve | pp. 327–338
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Quis libri legendi. The canon and the forms of its assimilation in Renaissance rationes studiorumIveta Nakládalová | pp. 339–350
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Translation in diaspora: Sephardic Spanish-Hebrew translations in the sixteenth centuryDavid Wacks | pp. 351–363
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The Atlantic-Iberian Enlightenment: On the imperial-colonial and Morisco-Basque mediations of the Spanish EnlightenmentJoseba Gabilondo | pp. 364–380
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The anthology as instrument of mediationMaría Rábade | pp. 381–399
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Cultural nationalism and schoolIsabel Clúa Ginés | pp. 400–408
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The recent systemic repositioning of literature in the French Basque Country: Origins of a literary subfieldUr Apalategi | pp. 409–423
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Censorship and narrative at the crossroads in Spain and Portugal: An overview of the literature translated in periods of dictatorship in the Iberian PeninsulaCristina Gómez Castro | pp. 424–437
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Section IV. Cultural studies and literary repertoires
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Forever young: Disciplinary anxiety, or the eternal (re)birth of Spanish cultural studiesAnxo Abuín González | pp. 439–451
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Elements for a critique of the paraliterary novel in the Iberian Peninsula, 1860-1890Santiago Díaz Lage | pp. 452–465
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“Popular” spectacles in Spain during the RestorationSerge Salaün | pp. 466–481
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The phenomenon of the bestseller in the Iberian PeninsulaDavid Viñas Piquer | pp. 482–497
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Postdigital fiction: Exit and memoryGermán Sierra | pp. 498–506
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The relationship between popular contemporary music and literature: some examples from the Iberian PeninsulaJoan-Elies Adell | pp. 507–519
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“Light changes the placement of things”: Immigration, gender, and resistance in hip-hop musicMaría do Cebreiro Rábade Villar | pp. 520–530
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Notes on the cinematographic canon and its relation to the theory of genres in a Spanish and Portuguese contextJosé Antonio Pérez Bowie and Fernando González García | pp. 531–549
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Television in Spain and Portugal: From the public monopoly to the new transmedia environmentConcepción Cascajosa Virino | pp. 550–562
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From the radio script to the sound script: An evolving/endangered species in Spain and PortugalVirginia Guarinos | pp. 563–569
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Transformations of the graphic novel in Spain: the cases of Max and Miguelanxo PradoAna Merino | pp. 570–578
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Feminist, gender and LGBTQ studies in the Iberian Peninsula: A comparative panoramaMaría Jesús Fariña Busto and Beatriz Suárez Briones | pp. 579–603
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Epilogue
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A view from Basque literature: The historian who mistook his literature for an islandFrederik Verbeke | pp. 605–610
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A view from Catalan literature: Iberian studies as comparative literature in thick description modeJoan Ramon Resina | pp. 611–620
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A view from Galician literature: The state and future of Galician studies in English-speaking academiaGabriel Rei-Doval | pp. 621–630
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A view from Portuguese literature: Critical notes towards a transnational perspectivePaulo de Medeiros | pp. 631–638
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A view from Spanish literature. A new armed vision: Comparative literature in the Iberian PeninsulaGermán Gullón | pp. 639–645
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A view from comparative history. International comparison: A historian's approachHeinz-Gerhard Haupt | pp. 646–649
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A view from comparative literary history, I: Comparative literature and literary historyMaria Alzira Seixo | pp. 650–652
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A view from comparative literary history, II: A comparative history of literatures in the Iberian Peninsula?Santiago Pérez Isasi | pp. 653–663
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Bioprofiles | pp. 723–740
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Index | pp. 741–765
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Marías, Clara & María del Rosario Martínez Navarro
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Subjects
Literature & Literary Studies
Main BIC Subject
DSA: Literary theory
Main BISAC Subject
LIT004280: LITERARY CRITICISM / European / Spanish & Portuguese