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New Hispanisms: Cultural and Literary Studies: New Hispanisms: Cultural and Literary Studies


About the Series

New Hispanisms: Cultural and Literary Studies presents innovative studies that seek to understand how the cultural production of the Hispanic world is generated, disseminated, and consumed. Ranging from the Spanish Middle Ages to modern Spain and Latin America, this series offers a forum for various critical and disciplinary approaches to cultural texts, including literature and other artifacts of Hispanic culture. Queries and proposals for single author volumes and collections of original essays are welcome.

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Latin American Technopoetics Scientific Explorations in New Media

Latin American Technopoetics: Scientific Explorations in New Media

1st Edition

By Scott Weintraub
June 28, 2018

Latin American Technopoetics: Scientific Explorations in New Media analyzes the ways in which poetry and multimedia installations by six prominent poets and artists engage, and in turn are engaged by, scientific discourses. In its innovative readings of contemporary digital media works, Latin ...

Multiple Modernities Carmen de Burgos, Author and Activist

Multiple Modernities: Carmen de Burgos, Author and Activist

1st Edition

Edited By Michelle Sharp, Anja Louis
June 07, 2017

This collection of essays confirms Carmen de Burgos’s pivotal place in Spanish feminist history by bringing together eminent international scholars who offer new readings of Burgos’s work. It includes the analyses of a number of lesser-known texts, both fictional and non-fictional, which give us a ...

Gendering the Crown in the Spanish Baroque Comedia

Gendering the Crown in the Spanish Baroque Comedia

1st Edition

By María Cristina Quintero
May 22, 2017

The Baroque Spanish stage is populated with virile queens and feminized kings. This study examines the diverse ways in which seventeenth-century comedias engage with the discourse of power and rulership and how it relates to gender. A privileged place for ideological negotiation, the comedia ...

Reading Inebriation in Early Colonial Peru

Reading Inebriation in Early Colonial Peru

1st Edition

By Mónica P. Morales
May 22, 2017

Viewing a variety of narratives through the lens of inebriation imagery, this book explores how such imagery emerges in colonial Peru as articulator of notions of the self and difference, resulting in a new social hierarchy and exploitation. Reading Inebriation evaluates the discursive and ...

Spanish Women Writers and Spain's Civil War

Spanish Women Writers and Spain's Civil War

1st Edition

By Maryellen Bieder, Roberta Johnson
December 15, 2016

The Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) pitted conservative forces including the army, the Church, the Falange (fascist party), landowners, and industrial capitalists against the Republic, installed in 1931 and supported by intellectuals, the petite bourgeoisie, many campesinos (farm laborers), and the ...

The Dynamics of Masculinity in Contemporary Spanish Culture

The Dynamics of Masculinity in Contemporary Spanish Culture

1st Edition

Edited By Lorraine Ryan, Ana Corbalan
November 28, 2016

This collection of essays explores cultural phenomena that are shaping masculine identities in contemporary Spain, asking and striving to answer these compelling questions: what does it mean to be a man in present-day Spain? How has masculinity evolved since Franco’s dictatorship? What are the ...

Intersections of Race, Class, Gender, and Nation in Fin-de-siècle Spanish Literature and Culture

Intersections of Race, Class, Gender, and Nation in Fin-de-siècle Spanish Literature and Culture

1st Edition

Edited By Jennifer Smith, Lisa Nalbone
September 05, 2016

This volume focuses on intersections of race, class, gender, and nation in the formation of the fin-de-siècle Spanish and Spanish colonial subject. Despite the wealth of research produced on gender, social class, race, and national identity few studies have focused on how these categories ...

The Formation of the Child in Early Modern Spain

The Formation of the Child in Early Modern Spain

1st Edition

By Grace E. Coolidge
August 26, 2016

Drawing on history, literature, and art to explore childhood in early modern Spain, the contributors to this collection argue that early modern Spaniards conceptualized childhood as a distinct and discrete stage in life which necessitated special care and concern. The volume contrasts the didactic ...

Literary Labyrinths in Franco-Era Barcelona Narrating Memory and Place

Literary Labyrinths in Franco-Era Barcelona: Narrating Memory and Place

1st Edition

By Colleen P. Culleton
August 03, 2016

Bringing together works by Salvador Espriu, Juan Goytisolo, Mercè Rodoreda, Esther Tusquets, and Juan Marsa that portray memory as a disorienting narrative enterprise, Colleen Culleton argues that the source of this disorientation is the material reality of life in Barcelona in the immediate ...

Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz and the Gender Politics of Knowledge in Colonial Mexico

Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz and the Gender Politics of Knowledge in Colonial Mexico

1st Edition

By Stephanie Kirk
June 30, 2016

Each of the book's five chapters evokes a colonial Mexican cultural and intellectual sphere: the library, anatomy and medicine, spirituality, classical learning, and publishing and printing. Using an array of literary texts and historical documents and alongside secondary historical and critical ...

Medical Cultures of the Early Modern Spanish Empire

Medical Cultures of the Early Modern Spanish Empire

1st Edition

By John Slater, Maríaluz López-Terrada, José Pardo-Tomás
October 10, 2014

Early modern Spain was a global empire in which a startling variety of medical cultures came into contact, and occasionally conflict, with one another. Spanish soldiers, ambassadors, missionaries, sailors, and emigrants of all sorts carried with them to the farthest reaches of the monarchy their ...

Argentine Serialised Radio Drama in the Infamous Decade, 1930–1943 Transmitting Nationhood

Argentine Serialised Radio Drama in the Infamous Decade, 1930–1943: Transmitting Nationhood

1st Edition

By Lauren Rea
June 04, 2013

In her study of key radio dramas broadcast from 1930 to 1943, Lauren Rea analyses the work of leading exponents of the genre against the wider backdrop of nation-building, intellectual movements and popular culture in Argentina. During the period that has come to be known as the infamous decade, ...

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