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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Professor or Dr. Ana María G. Laguna (Associate Professor, Rutgers University-Camden, USA)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic USA Weight: 0.517kg ISBN: 9781501374920ISBN 10: 1501374923 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 26 August 2021 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsList of Figures Preface Acknowledgments Introduction: A Tale of Two Modernities 1. Mining the Golden Age: The Spanish Avant-Garde and Visions of Modernity 2. The Empire Strikes Back: Cervantes, Enemy of the State 3. A Generational Shift: Riding Away from the Empire 4. Anachronism as Weapon and Resistance (Quixotes Left and Right) 5. Post Tenebras Spero Lucem: Attempts at Counter-Colonial Modernity in Exile Epilogue: Humanism Suspended—The Reverberations of Silence Notes References IndexReviewsA fascinating exploration of the ideological forces which shaped Golden Age criticism in the 20th century based on the recovery of the voices of Spanish avant-garde intellectuals who were forced into exile after the Spanish Civil War. It builds a vital bridge between the humanism of Cervantes and the progressive ideals embodied in the Second Spanish Republic. * Francis Lough, Emeritus Professor of Hispanic Studies, University of Birmingham, UK, and editor of Hacia la novela nueva: Essays on the Spanish Avant-Garde Novel (2000) * Ana Maria G. Laguna has produced an exquisite study about the organic relationship between Cervantes studies and the Spanish search for identity in the 20th century. In this must-read book, Laguna evinces that the question of what Cervantes and his work signify has long been correlated to the question of how Spanishness is defined and redefined in Spain and the Americas. * Christina H. Lee, Associate Professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Princeton University, USA * Laguna's study allows us to contemplate the cultural history of Spain through a new set of lenses that convincingly clear away a legacy of assumptions that have hindered our understanding about the fundamental role of the Spanish Golden Age in the very fabric of Spain's idiosyncratic modernity before Franco's rule. This is a fundamental work centered on the dialogue between Golden Age imperial Spain and the avant-garde Spanish culture that flourished from the 1920s into the 1930s, a work that auspiciously shifts the frame of discussion. * Steven Hutchinson, Professor Spanish & Portuguese, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA, and author of Frontier Narratives: Liminal Lives in the Early Modern Mediterranean (2020) * A fascinating exploration of the ideological forces which shaped Golden Age criticism in the 20th century based on the recovery of the voices of Spanish avant-garde intellectuals who were forced into exile after the Spanish Civil War. It builds a vital bridge between the humanism of Cervantes and the progressive ideals embodied in the Second Spanish Republic. * Francis Lough, Emeritus Professor of Hispanic Studies, University of Birmingham, UK, and editor of Hacia la novela nueva: Essays on the Spanish Avant-Garde Novel (2000) * Ana Maria G. Laguna has produced an exquisite study about the organic relationship between Cervantes studies and the Spanish search for identity in the 20th century. In this must-read book, Laguna evinces that the question of what Cervantes and his work signify has long been correlated to the question of how Spanishness is defined and redefined in Spain and the Americas. * Christina H. Lee, Associate Professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Princeton University, USA * A fascinating exploration of the ideological forces which shaped Golden Age criticism in the 20th century based on the recovery of the voices of Spanish avant-garde intellectuals who were forced into exile after the Spanish Civil War. It builds a vital bridge between the humanism of Cervantes and the progressive ideals embodied in the Second Spanish Republic. * Francis Lough, Emeritus Professor of Hispanic Studies, University of Birmingham, UK, and editor of Hacia la novela nueva: Essays on the Spanish Avant-Garde Novel (2000) * Author InformationAna María G. Laguna is Professor of Spanish and Golden Age Literature at Rutgers University-Camden, USA. She is a founding member of the Cervantes Public Project and an Executive Director of the Cervantes Society of America. Her research relates visual and verbal domains, multiple national traditions, and disparate chronologies, focusing on how culture reflects prominent artistic and socio-political anxieties. Her work has been awarded fellowships by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Program for Cultural Cooperation Between Ministry of Culture of Spain and United States Universities and the Shakespeare Folger Institute. She is the author of Cervantes and the Pictorial Imagination (2009) and co-editor (with John Beusterien) of the collected volume Goodbye Eros: Recasting Forms and Norms of Love in the Age of Cervantes (2020). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |