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Rewriting Franco's Spain: Marcel Proust and the Dissident Novelists
of Memory proposes a new reading of some of the most culturally
significant and closely studied works of Spanish memory fiction
from the past seventy years. It examines the influence of French
writer Marcel Proust on fiction concerning the Spanish Civil War
and Franco's dictatorship by Carmen Laforet, Juan Goytisolo, Juan
Benet, Carmen Martin Gaite, Jorge Semprun, and Javier Marias. It
explores the ways in which A la recherche du temps perdu has been
instrumental in these authors' works, galvanizing their creative
impetus, shaping their imaginative act, and guiding their
adversarial stance toward Franco's regime. This book illustrates
how these writers use Proustian themes and techniques and thereby
enhances our understanding of the function of memory and fictional
creation in some of the most important milestones in contemporary
Spanish literature. Rewriting Franco's Spain argues that an
appreciation of Proust's pervasive influence on Spanish memory
writing obliges us to reconsider the notion that Franco's regime
maintained a rigid stranglehold on imported culture. Capturing the
richness of Spanish novelists' contact with literature produced
outside of Spain, it challenges the prevailing scholarly tendency
to focus on the novelists' immediate sociopolitical concerns. There
is more to these texts than a simple testimony of the brutality and
hardship of the civil war and life under Franco. By illuminating
the subversive nature of Spanish novelists' use of a
Proust-inspired practice of self-writing, Rewriting Franco's Spain
seeks to readjust some of the ways we view the role of novelists
living during the regime and in its wake. It advocates a conception
of novelists as dissidents, teasing out the seditious undercurrent
of their cultivation of self-writing and examining how they
disputed the regime's ideas about what culture should look like.
The preconception that the development of Spanish literature under
Franco was stunted because Spaniards were prevented from reading
works considered an affront to National-Catholic sensibilities is
cast aside, as is the notion that Spain was isolated from narrative
developments elsewhere. Rewriting Franco's Spain ultimately reveals
the centrality of Proust's monumental novel in the evolution of
contemporary Spanish literature.
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