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Original, action-oriented humanist practices for interpreting and
intervening in the city: a new methodology at the intersection of
the humanities, design, and urban studies. Urban humanities is an
emerging field at the intersection of the humanities, urban
planning, and design. It offers a new approach not only for
understanding cities in a global context but for intervening in
them, interpreting their histories, engaging with them in the
present, and speculating about their futures. This book introduces
both the theory and practice of urban humanities, tracing the
evolution of the concept, presenting methods and practices with a
wide range of research applications, describing changes in teaching
and curricula, and offering case studies of urban humanities
practices in the field. Urban humanities views the city through a
lens of spatial justice, and its inquiries are centered on the
microsettings of everyday life. The book's case studies report on
real-world projects in mega-cities in the Pacific Rim-Tokyo,
Shanghai, Mexico City, and Los Angeles-with several projects
described in detail, including playful spaces for children in
car-oriented Mexico City, a commons in a Tokyo neighborhood, and a
rolling story-telling box to promote "literary justice" in Los
Angeles.
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La Regenta (Spanish, Paperback)
Leopoldo Alas; Edited by Maite Zubiaurre, Eileen Powell
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R1,546
R1,248
Discovery Miles 12 480
Save R298 (19%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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La Regenta, by Leopoldo Alas (Clarin), is considered a (if not the)
great masterpiece of Spanish Realist and Naturalist fiction,
comparable only to Benito Perez Galdos' Fortunata y Jacinta. Staged
in Oviedo (Vetusta, in the novel), La Regenta's main character is
the beautiful and sensitive Ana Ozores, newlywed to the mature
Victor Quintanar, former regent of the Audiencia. Harassed by the
local seducer, Alvaro Mesia, and by the local cathedral's Dean, don
Fermin de Pas, Ana finally rejects the priest and falls for Alvaro.
Don Victor discovers the treason and, pushed by don Fermin,
challenges Alvaro to a duel, where he is deadly wounded and finally
dies. The novel is exquisite in its careful and detailed depiction
of the provincial background, and the complex interweaving of the
different social classes, an approach covered in depth by the
traditional literary critique in the numerous forewords to the
various editions. The present edition, however, proposes a
different approach. With the help of gender studies and feminist
theory, it concentrates on the main character, Ana Ozores, to
unearth the complexity of her personality, from her supposed
hysteria and her mystical bouts to her thirst for freedom and
agency. The introduction to this critical edition carefully looks
at the semantics underlying Ana Ozores's circumstances and actions,
and decodes them as solid proofs of an early feminism. La Regenta
belongs to the illustrious European cycle of novels centered on
feminine adultery, as Leon Tolstoi's Ana Karenina, Theodor
Fontane's Effi Briest, Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary, Emile
Zola's La conquete de Plassans, (to which it resembles most) and
Eca de Queiroz's O Primo Basilio. However, the second and
innovative objective of this edition is to highlight the clear
connections of La Regenta, not so much with the foreign novels
abovementioned, but with the Spanish novel El Cura. Caso de Incesto
by Eduardo Lopez Bago, a contemporary writer with whom Clarin also
shared the taste for radical naturalism. Both novels share common
ground, and elaborate on the cultural stereotype of (male)
ecclesiastical sin coupled with (female) hysteria. La Regenta,
however, adds complexity and nuance to El cura. Caso de incesto's
more straightforward approach to sexual repression, mental illness
and celibate. Ana Ozores, certainly, is much more than a
"nerviosilla" ("a nervous little thing"), as Perez Galdos chooses
to call her in his famous foreword to La Regenta"s second edition.
El Cura. (Caso de Incesto) Novela medico social (The Priest. Case
of Incest. Medical-Social Novel) (1885) constitutes, together with
La Regenta (1884-1885) by Leopoldo Alas, a.k.a. Clarin, one of the
best Spanish examples of anti-clerical literature, and yet another
example of Spain's increasing move towards secularization during
the second half of the XIX Century. El Cura (Caso de Incesto) is
the first novel of a trilogy -integrated also by El Confesionario
(Satiriasis) (The Confessional - Satyriasis) (1885) and La Monja
(The Nun) (1886)- that contests Christian sexual moral authority
and demands its suppression based on the laws of Nature. More than
a mere attack against the Catholic religion, El Cura highlights the
misuse, on the part of the Church, of certain religious beliefs, to
the detriment of the sexual (and mental) health of priests. Lopez
Bago's anti-clericalism, thus, is rather physiological than
political. As the author states, El Cura inaugurates a new series
of studies aimed at fighting ecclesiastic celibacy and its
dangerous consequences, seen from a socio-medical perspective. El
Cura tells the story of the relationship between Roman, a handsome
young priest, and his beautiful sister Gracia. The incest will not
take place until the end, but the whole plot is geared towards it.
Fermin, a fellow priest who lives with Ana, his concubine, cogently
symbolizes the decay of ecclesiastical ethics. According to El
Cura's clear-cut message, only the implementation of celibacy can
save the Catholic Church. For, as Lopez Bago puts it, celibate
priests live among us hiding their appetites, and do not starve to
death for the sole reason that they feast in secrecy. This edition
brings back to print an author and a novel that became a true best
seller during a particularly agitated period of Spanish history,
and in a time when sexuality fell under careful scrutiny both in
its social and scientific aspects. The foreword by prof. Maite
Zubiaurre highlights the common aspects shared by El Cura and
Clarin's La Regenta (1884-1885), one of the great literary
masterpieces of Spanish Realism and Naturalism. Both novels fall
prey to controversy and take a skeptical look at ecclesiastical
celibacy. More important, in both novels, female sexuality takes
center stage, and unavoidably degenerates into pathology and
hysteria.
Alvaro Retana (1890-1970), who many consider The Spanish Petronius,
belongs to that lighthearted erotic literature trend popular during
the early twentieth Century, that became known in Spain as
Sicalipsis (from ancient Greek sykon -fig, or vulva- and aleiptikos
-to stimulate). In open opposition to the somber and solemn Spanish
'98 generation, and other representatives of the so called high
culture, Retana's popular erotic novelettes showcased the smiling
and playful face of a country that during the 1920s and 1930s
openly embraced European modernity and stood up to its challenges,
among them the sexual revolution and explicit eroticism. Alvaro
Retana, a flamboyant and openly homosexual artist, illustrator,
fashion designer, and renowned composer of cuples (a cuple is a
risque popular song usually sung in variety shows), is also the
successful author of many sicaliptic novelettes, among them, the
four short novels included in this volume. Retana is one of the
first writers who, in Las locas de postin and other openly queer
and sexually explicit novels, dare to depict the uninhibited
sensuality of a free and happy-go-lucky Spain, soon to die at the
hands of the Franco dictatorship. Retana's smiling and festive
homoeroticism, clearly a forerunner of Almodovar's and Mendicutti's
gay aesthetics, stands in stark contrast to the apocalyptic and
pessimistic vision of homosexuality in Alfonso Hernandez-Cata's
novel El Angel de Sodoma (Stockcero 2011), a novel, like Retana's
fictions, meant to depict the gay underground world of early
twentieth century Spain. Retana openly celebrates queer love, as
well as the sexuality of women, both homosexual and straight.
Novelettes such as Los ambiguos, Lolita buscadora de emociones, and
El tonto amply instruct the unabashed tobillera, or Spanish
flapper, in the pleasures of Venus. This volume comprises four of
Retana's most successful novels, and with the critical foreword and
footnotes by Maite Zubiaurre and Audrey Harris gives a clearer view
of what the Spanish society was really reading while the high
literature obtained all the academic applause.
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