Making Modern Spain
Religion, Secularization, and Cultural Production
Making Modern Spain: Religion, Secularization, and Cultural Production is a scholarly work on Spanish religious and cultural history. It is an interdisciplinary study that offers fresh insights into political and religious changes in nineteenth-century Spain by foregrounding social experiences through historical analysis and literary criticism.
Space, Drama, and Empire
Mapping the Past in Lope de Vega's Comedia
Dystopias of Infamy
Insult and Collective Identity in Early Modern Spain
Founders of the Future
The Science and Industry of Spanish Modernization
Shipwreck in the Early Modern Hispanic World
Shipwreck in the Early Modern Hispanic World
Calila
The Later Novels of Carmen Martín Gaite
Indiscreet Fantasies
Iberian Queer Cinema
Offering in-depth analyses of fifteen different queer films from the Iberian Peninsula, this collection shows how a diverse group of filmmakers from regions including Catalonia, Portugal, Castile, Galicia, and the Basque Country have produced films that challenge the region’s conservative religious values and gender norms, while intervening in vital debates about politics, history, and nation.
Between Market and Myth
The Spanish Artist Novel in the Post-Transition, 1992-2014
Between Market and Myth is a study of novels about artists and the art world written in Spain in the years following the Transition to democracy after Francisco Franco’s death. The novels studied portray a clash between the myth of artistic freedom and artists’ willing recruitment or cooptation by market forces or political influence.