Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Latin American Literature (3)
- Chicana/o Studies (1)
- Christianity (1)
- Creative Writing (1)
- English Language and Literature (1)
-
- European Languages and Societies (1)
- History (1)
- Latin American History (1)
- Latin American Languages and Societies (1)
- Other Religion (1)
- Other Spanish and Portuguese Language and Literature (1)
- Poetry (1)
- Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies (1)
- Religion (1)
- Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion (1)
- Spanish Linguistics (1)
- Keyword
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Spanish Literature
Unha Vez Tiven Un Cravo (Once I Had A Nail), Roslie De Castro, Scott Cooper
Unha Vez Tiven Un Cravo (Once I Had A Nail), Roslie De Castro, Scott Cooper
Obsculta
Rosalia de Castro was a nineteenth-century Spanish Catholic writer now best-known for her novels, but her poetry is widely admired in the Spanish-speaking world as well. This devotional poem is written in the language of her native region of Galicia, and the translator hopes that this new version will awaken interest in Castro's work in the English-speaking world.
José Isaacson Y La PoéTica Del Encuentro, Marina Martin
José Isaacson Y La PoéTica Del Encuentro, Marina Martin
Hispanic Studies Faculty Books
Find this book in the library.
José Isaacson (Buenos Aires, 1922) pertenece a un grupo estelar de poetas argentinos –Borges, Olga Orozco, Roberto Juarroz y Alejandra Pizarnik, entre otros– que, en conjunto, marcan un hito en la literatura hispana del siglo XX. Dada la riqueza temática, el giro hacia la metafísica que se evidencia invariablemente en sus escritos y la profundidad de su visión humanística, cabe suponer en la obra de Isaacson un alcance internacional. El texto dialoga con voces filosóficas que perfilan un encuentro asentado en el misterio del tiempo. Aristóteles, Spinoza, Kafka, Kant, Buber y Wittgenstein, entre otros, …
Tiempo Para Amar: José Isaacson En Diálogo Con Su Vocación, Marina Martin
Tiempo Para Amar: José Isaacson En Diálogo Con Su Vocación, Marina Martin
Hispanic Studies Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
El Militarismo En La Granada De Rodolfo Walsh, Eleonora Bertranou
El Militarismo En La Granada De Rodolfo Walsh, Eleonora Bertranou
Hispanic Studies Faculty Publications
"Rodolfo Walsh escribió sus dos únicas obras de teatro, La granada y La batalla, en 1965, cuando ya se reconocía como un intelectual de izquierda, bajo la influencia de su experiencia cubana, pero aún reticente a creer que para los países latinoamericanos era posible dar comienzo a un proyecto evolucionario liderado por grupos armados. En la tematización de las Fuerzas Armadas, Walsh llama la atención sobre el militarismo de los países latinoamericanos y usa la sátira para agudizar su crítica a tal fenómeno. En La granada, reconoce el rol de la institución militar bajo un nuevo orden mundial y ridiculiza …
Torn Between Two Mothers: Indigenous Women As Spiritual Mentors In Two Novels By Mexican Women Writers, Elena Sánchez Mora
Torn Between Two Mothers: Indigenous Women As Spiritual Mentors In Two Novels By Mexican Women Writers, Elena Sánchez Mora
Hispanic Studies Faculty Publications
In many novels by contemporary Hispanic women writers, the estrangement between mother and daughter seems to be a constant underlying theme. There are several examples of texts in which distancing between mother and daughter renders the role of the mother ineffective, prompting the daughter to search for an alternative maternal figure.
Within Mexican narrative, I have come upon four novels with protagonists who experience this predicament, but in which all the countervailing figures are indigenous women who are servants in the middle class white households inhabited by the young female characters. For this article, I have chosen only two of …
El 27 LúDrico : Los Suplementos De "Carmen" Y "Gallo", Patricia BolañOs-Fabres
El 27 LúDrico : Los Suplementos De "Carmen" Y "Gallo", Patricia BolañOs-Fabres
Hispanic Studies Faculty Books
No abstract provided.
Isabel Archer And Gertrudis (Tula): Women At The Turn-Fo-The-Century Struggling For Freedom, Kathleen Ann Westerhaus
Isabel Archer And Gertrudis (Tula): Women At The Turn-Fo-The-Century Struggling For Freedom, Kathleen Ann Westerhaus
Honors Theses, 1963-2015
Isabel Archer, the protagonist of Henry James' The Portrait of a Lady, and Gertrudis (Tula), the protagonist of Miguel de Unamuno's La T’a Tula are strong, able-bodied women who must combat the restraints of a corseting society. James and Unamuno write with the same agenda to critique how the turn-of-the-century society affected the lives of women. Although heroic in their determination to live life, both Isabel and Gertrudis fall victim to the society that reveres freedom more than passion. If these women had been allowed to not only express their passions but live their love for Caspar Goodwood and …
The Strategies Of Revealing How Identities Have Become Problematized In Latin America, Using The Selected Works Of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Jamie Hendrickson
The Strategies Of Revealing How Identities Have Become Problematized In Latin America, Using The Selected Works Of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Jamie Hendrickson
Honors Theses, 1963-2015
In my exploration of this topic, I chose to focus on two of Garcia Marquez's short stories--"A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings" and "The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World"--and his novel Love in the Time of Cholera. Apart from an introduction and a conclusion, my paper can be divided into three parts. The first part--which can not be separated from the following two--focuses on the author and the context from which he writes. The following two segments build upon this by analyzing, first, his two short stories and, next, his novel in light of this groundwork. My intent …