Description

Book Synopsis
This collection of new essays by scholars from across Europe focuses on the key theoretical and historical questions within the rapidly growing field of Iberian studies, which is taken by the authors to mean the methodological consideration of the Iberian peninsula as a complex and multilingual cultural and literary system. Dealing with a wide range of issues and cultural output from a comparative European perspective, the essays question the concept of ‘Iberian’ itself, query its suitability as a starting point for academic research and consider it in relation to other more established concepts and identities, such as Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, Basque and Galician, as well as wider European and Western identities. The contributors examine the relationship between the reality of ‘Iberia’ and the mythical, historical and artistic narratives created to support or represent this collective identity, with a particular focus on the period from the nineteenth century to the present day.

Table of Contents
Contents: Santiago Pérez Isasi/ ngela Fernandes: Looking at Iberia in/from Europe – Santiago Pérez Isasi: Iberian Studies: A State of the Art and Future Perspectives – Teresa Pinheiro: Iberian and European Studies – Archaeology of a New Epistemological Field – John Macklin: Modernism and Modernity: Iberian Perspectives – Gabriel Magalhães: Europe: The Letter of Numbers. From the Alpha of Peninsular Comparative Literature to the Omega of European Comparative Literature – Roberto Vecchi: Thinking from Europe about an Iberian ‘South’: Portugal as a Case Study – Jüri Talvet: How to Research Iberian Literatures from a European Perspective? Premises and Contexts – César Domínguez: Literatures in Spain: European Literature, World-Literature, World Literature? – Maria Fernanda de Abreu: Iberia in Search for a Literary Identity: A Stone Raft? – Ferenc Pál: Do the Portuguese Toot Merrily? - The Image of Portugal, Portuguese History and People in Hungary during the Nineteenth Century – Derek Flitter: North and South: Iberian Identity Formation in Romanticism and Post-Romanticism – Juan M. Ribera Llopis: Centre–Peninsular Considerations on Catalan Literary Regeneration: An Everlasting Code? – Leonardo Romero Tobar: Juan Valera’s Iberism – Maria Graciete Besse: Iberism Reconfigured: Between Passion and Utopia – ngela Fernandes: Iberian and Romance Identities: Literary Representations of the Centre and the Margins – Jon Kortazar: Identities in Diverse Societies in the Novel Bilbao - New York - Bilbao by Kirmen Uribe – Helena Buffery: Iberian Identity in the Translation Zone – Esther Gimeno Ugalde: Polyglot Iberia - or What Is the Place for Iberian Languages in Current Cinema? Presence (and Absence) of Iberian Languages in Cinema.

Looking at Iberia: A Comparative European

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    A Paperback / softback by Santiago Pérez Isasi, Angela Fernandes

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      View other formats and editions of Looking at Iberia: A Comparative European by Santiago Pérez Isasi

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 11/09/2013
      ISBN13: 9783034309349, 978-3034309349
      ISBN10: 3034309341

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This collection of new essays by scholars from across Europe focuses on the key theoretical and historical questions within the rapidly growing field of Iberian studies, which is taken by the authors to mean the methodological consideration of the Iberian peninsula as a complex and multilingual cultural and literary system. Dealing with a wide range of issues and cultural output from a comparative European perspective, the essays question the concept of ‘Iberian’ itself, query its suitability as a starting point for academic research and consider it in relation to other more established concepts and identities, such as Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, Basque and Galician, as well as wider European and Western identities. The contributors examine the relationship between the reality of ‘Iberia’ and the mythical, historical and artistic narratives created to support or represent this collective identity, with a particular focus on the period from the nineteenth century to the present day.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Santiago Pérez Isasi/ ngela Fernandes: Looking at Iberia in/from Europe – Santiago Pérez Isasi: Iberian Studies: A State of the Art and Future Perspectives – Teresa Pinheiro: Iberian and European Studies – Archaeology of a New Epistemological Field – John Macklin: Modernism and Modernity: Iberian Perspectives – Gabriel Magalhães: Europe: The Letter of Numbers. From the Alpha of Peninsular Comparative Literature to the Omega of European Comparative Literature – Roberto Vecchi: Thinking from Europe about an Iberian ‘South’: Portugal as a Case Study – Jüri Talvet: How to Research Iberian Literatures from a European Perspective? Premises and Contexts – César Domínguez: Literatures in Spain: European Literature, World-Literature, World Literature? – Maria Fernanda de Abreu: Iberia in Search for a Literary Identity: A Stone Raft? – Ferenc Pál: Do the Portuguese Toot Merrily? - The Image of Portugal, Portuguese History and People in Hungary during the Nineteenth Century – Derek Flitter: North and South: Iberian Identity Formation in Romanticism and Post-Romanticism – Juan M. Ribera Llopis: Centre–Peninsular Considerations on Catalan Literary Regeneration: An Everlasting Code? – Leonardo Romero Tobar: Juan Valera’s Iberism – Maria Graciete Besse: Iberism Reconfigured: Between Passion and Utopia – ngela Fernandes: Iberian and Romance Identities: Literary Representations of the Centre and the Margins – Jon Kortazar: Identities in Diverse Societies in the Novel Bilbao - New York - Bilbao by Kirmen Uribe – Helena Buffery: Iberian Identity in the Translation Zone – Esther Gimeno Ugalde: Polyglot Iberia - or What Is the Place for Iberian Languages in Current Cinema? Presence (and Absence) of Iberian Languages in Cinema.

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