Spanish Gothic : national identity, collaboration and cultural adaptation /: national identity, collaboration and cultural adaptation. ([2017])
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- Spanish Gothic : national identity, collaboration and cultural adaptation /: national identity, collaboration and cultural adaptation. ([2017])
- Main Title:
- Spanish Gothic : national identity, collaboration and cultural adaptation
- Further Information:
- Note: Xavier Aldana Reyes.
- Authors:
- Aldana Reyes, Xavier
- Contents:
- Dedication; Acknowledgements; Contents; Chapter 1: Introduction: Defining and Delimiting the Spanish Gothic; The Origins of the Spanish Gothic; Terminological Complications: The Fantastic versus Gothic; Spanish Gothic Cinema; Recuperating the Spanish Gothic; National Identity, Collaboration and Cultural Adaptation; Notes; References; Part I: First Wave Gothic (1785-1834); Chapter 2: Imported Terrors and First Genre Hybrids; A Gothic Translation: Agustín Pérez Zaragoza's Funereal Gallery of Spectres and Bloody Shadows (1831). First Spanish Gothic Fictions: The 'Delightful Instruction' of Valdemaro (1792)Notes; References; Chapter 3: The Early Spanish Gothic Novel (1800-34); Spanish Terror: The Supernatural Foretold of Pascual Pérez Rodríguez; Anticlerical and Anti-Inquisition Gothic: The Symbiotic Case of Cornelia Bororquia (1801) and Vargas (1822); Notes; References; Part II: From Romanticism to the Fin-de-siècle (1834-1900); Chapter 4: Spanish Romanticism and the Gothic; Gothic Romanticism: José de Espronceda's The Student of Salamanca (1840); Folkloric Gothic: Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer's Legends; Notes; References. Chapter 5: From the 1860s to the Fin-de-Siècle: The Development of the Gothic Short StoryNew Horrors: Rafael Serrano Alcázar, Pedro Antonio de Alarcón and Emilia Pardo Bazán; Mad Science: The Short Stories of Justo Sanjurjo López de Gomara; Notes; References; Part III: Modern and Contemporary Gothic Literature (1900-2016); Chapter 6: The Twentieth CenturyDedication; Acknowledgements; Contents; Chapter 1: Introduction: Defining and Delimiting the Spanish Gothic; The Origins of the Spanish Gothic; Terminological Complications: The Fantastic versus Gothic; Spanish Gothic Cinema; Recuperating the Spanish Gothic; National Identity, Collaboration and Cultural Adaptation; Notes; References; Part I: First Wave Gothic (1785-1834); Chapter 2: Imported Terrors and First Genre Hybrids; A Gothic Translation: Agustín Pérez Zaragoza's Funereal Gallery of Spectres and Bloody Shadows (1831). First Spanish Gothic Fictions: The 'Delightful Instruction' of Valdemaro (1792)Notes; References; Chapter 3: The Early Spanish Gothic Novel (1800-34); Spanish Terror: The Supernatural Foretold of Pascual Pérez Rodríguez; Anticlerical and Anti-Inquisition Gothic: The Symbiotic Case of Cornelia Bororquia (1801) and Vargas (1822); Notes; References; Part II: From Romanticism to the Fin-de-siècle (1834-1900); Chapter 4: Spanish Romanticism and the Gothic; Gothic Romanticism: José de Espronceda's The Student of Salamanca (1840); Folkloric Gothic: Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer's Legends; Notes; References. Chapter 5: From the 1860s to the Fin-de-Siècle: The Development of the Gothic Short StoryNew Horrors: Rafael Serrano Alcázar, Pedro Antonio de Alarcón and Emilia Pardo Bazán; Mad Science: The Short Stories of Justo Sanjurjo López de Gomara; Notes; References; Part III: Modern and Contemporary Gothic Literature (1900-2016); Chapter 6: The Twentieth Century (1900-75): Modernist Spiritualism and Political Gothic; The Occult-Spiritualist Gothic Fiction of Emilio Carrère; After the War: The Dialectic Gothic of Alfonso Sastre; Notes; References. Chapter 7: From the Death of Franco to the Present: The Establishment of Horror and the Gothic AuteurThe Female Gothic of Pilar Pedraza; Internationalising the Spanish Gothic: The 'Nuanced Gothicism' of Carlos Ruiz Zafón; Notes; References; Part IV: Spanish Gothic Cinema (1906-2016); Chapter 8: From Segundo de Chomón to the Rise and Fall of 'Fantaterror'; The Beginnings of Gothic Horror and the Exploitative Extension of Glocal Myths; 'National' Monsters: The Blind Dead and Alaric de Marnac; Notes; References. Chapter 9: The Post-Millennial Horror Revival: Auteurs, Gothic (Dis)Continuities and National HistoryA Spectre Is Haunting Spain: Guillermo del Toro's Gothic Treatments of the Spanish Civil War; An Unashamedly Gothic Horror Cinema, or the Case of the Valdemar Films; Notes; References; Chapter 10: Conclusion: A Language of Collaboration and Liberation; Notes; References; Index. … (more)
- Publisher Details:
- London : Palgrave Macmillan
- Publication Date:
- 2017
- Extent:
- 1 online resource
- Subjects:
- 863
Gothic fiction (Literary genre), Spanish -- History and criticism
Motion pictures -- Spain -- History and criticism -- 20th century
Motion pictures -- Spain -- History and criticism -- 21st century
LITERARY CRITICISM -- European -- Spanish & Portuguese
Gothic fiction (Literary genre), Spanish
Motion pictures
Social Science -- General
Performing Arts -- Film & Video -- History & Criticism
Literary Criticism -- General
Performing Arts -- Film & Video -- General
Literary Criticism -- European -- General
Cultural studies
Films, cinema
Literature: history & criticism
Motion pictures
European literature
Film theory & criticism
Spain
Electronic books
Criticism, interpretation, etc - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9781137306012
1137306017 - Related ISBNs:
- 9781137306005
1137306009 - Notes:
- Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
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- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
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- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.359172
- Ingest File:
- 01_321.xml