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Introduction: The Iberian Peninsula as a literary space

  • Sharon Feldman
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© 2010 John Benjamins B.V. / Association Internationale de Littérature Comparée

© 2010 John Benjamins B.V. / Association Internationale de Littérature Comparée

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Editor's Preface ix
  4. Introduction xi
  5. Section I. Discourses on Iberian literary history
  6. The European horizon of Peninsular literary historiographical discourses 1
  7. Historiography and the geo-literary imaginary 53
  8. Section II. The Iberian Peninsula as a literary space
  9. Introduction: The Iberian Peninsula as a literary space 133
  10. Identitarian projections: Between isolationism and reintegrationism
  11. The hidden history of tripartite Iberianism 138
  12. On Lusism and Lusofonia 163
  13. Travel writing 183
  14. Cities, cultural centers and enclaves
  15. Empires waxing and waning 211
  16. Bilbao and the literary system in the Basque Country 222
  17. Contemporary Catalan literature 237
  18. Literary and cultural production centers in Galicia (1840–1936) 253
  19. Cities, cultural centers, and peripheries
  20. From Iberia to Africa 268
  21. Southern Spain 278
  22. The Canaries 290
  23. Insulated voices looking for the world 309
  24. Section III. The multilingual literary space of the Iberian Peninsula
  25. Introduction: Multilingualism and literature in the Iberian Peninsula 325
  26. Bilingualism and Diglossia in Medieval Iberia (350–1350) 333
  27. The impact of Arabic diglossia among the Muslims, Jews and Christians of al-Andalus 351
  28. The Jewish Literature in Medieval Iberia 366
  29. The Latin language, a European linguistic continuum 386
  30. Galician-Portuguese as a literary language in the Middle Ages 396
  31. Castilian and Portuguese in the sixteenth century 413
  32. Literary language and diatopic variation 429
  33. Basque as a literary language 445
  34. Ideology and image of Peninsular languages in Spanish literature 456
  35. Section IV. Dimensions of orality
  36. Introduction to Dimensions of orality 475
  37. Comparativism and orality 478
  38. Epic and ballad in the Hispanic tradition 502
  39. The traditional Iberian lyric of the Middle Ages and the Golden Age 510
  40. Linguistic borders and oral transmission 536
  41. Iberian traditions of international folktale 553
  42. Literature and new forms of orality 562
  43. Section V. Temporal frames and literary (inter-)systems
  44. Introduction: Temporal frames and literary (inter-)systems 575
  45. Building a literary model 582
  46. Literature at the crossroads of politics 595
  47. The court of the Catholic Monarchs (1474–1504), or the break in the equilibrium among Peninsular languages 601
  48. Theatrical repertoire models in Portugal 614
  49. The Spanish literary system in the nineteenth century 630
  50. The dialogue of Iberian literary nationalisms 641
  51. The shifting systems for literary creation in the novel during the transition and democracy (1975–82) 653
  52. References 665
  53. Index 727
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