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The Spanish novel in a turbulent 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, Ramon Buckley, Jose F. Colmeiro, Stacey Dolgin Casado,
Sebastiaan Faber, David K. Herzberger, Carlos Alex Longhurst,
Kathleen N. March, Cristina Martinez-Carazo, Alfredo Martinez
Exposito, Nina L. Molinaro, Gonzalo Navajas, Mari Jose Olaziregi,
Janet D. Perez, Randolph D. Pope, Josep Miquel Sobrer, H. Rosi
Song.
In post-Franco Spain, a re-shaping of notions of the masculine has
been under way for some time. The authors of "Live Flesh"
demonstrate how contemporary Spanish films, during this modern
period, have contributed to this process. They do so by visualizing
the ways in which Spanish men have been abandoning old self images
and adopting new ones, and they explain and explore the complexity
and diversity of these fresh cinematic creations of masculine
identities.
The book's point of focus is Spanish films of the democratic
period, both popular and auteur, made by directors of national and
international prominence, such as Pedro Almodovar, Alejandro
Amenabar, Bigas Luna or Julio Medem, as well as films featuring
acclaimed actors who have contributed to the construction of
contemporary ideas of the masculine in their country, including
Antonio Banderas and Javier Bardem. Using a fresh theoretical
framework, embracing queer and feminist theory and concepts of
nation, race and class, each chapter examines key films that
represent the male body, highlighting notable elements - young,
muscular, homosexual, (dis)abled, foreign and so on - and goes on
to focus on recent case studies from the early 1990s to the
present.
" "
An increasingly transnational Spanish cinema is a most promising
field in which to explore questions of how male bodies are
represented - and mediated - in film. "Live Flesh" more than
fulfils this promise and goes further, to reveal how these
representations have intervened in the Spanish cultural
imagination.
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