Includes bibliographical references (pages [277]-315) and index.
Contents:
Introduction: Figures of exile / Daniela Omlor and Eduardo Tasis Moratinos -- The poetics of exile. José Díaz Fernández : un poeta de 20 en la España de 1920 (Posthumous article) / Álvaro García y Nigel Dennis -- 'Azul en nuestro oscuro aire'. Lorca; Cernuda : a Dialogue in vita e in morte / Emilio Javier Peral Vega -- Rafael Alberti en Francia (1939-1940) : poétización de la experiencia como refugiado / Luis Pascual Cordero Sánchez -- 'Ceibe na Saudade' : Ernesto Guerra da Cal's exile poetry / David Miranda-Barreiro -- 'They were the voice and we the echo' : voice, identity and landscape in the poetry of Nuria Parés / Mariama Ifode-Blease -- La influencia de Emilio Prados en la obra poética de Tomás Segovia / Eduardo Tasis Moratinos -- Thinking through exile. The notion of truth in María Zambrano's Filosofía y poesía and its Heideggerian echoes / Daniela Omlor -- 1937-1938 : La salida al exilio de Juan David García Bacca, de París a Quito / Salomé Foehn -- 'My world is not of this kingdom' : José Bergamín's republican and dissenting voice during the Spanish transition / Iván López Cabello -- Piecing together the puzzle : María Luisa Elío's autobiographical project / Jennifer Irvine-Cadman -- Cervantes como conciencia disidente : la obra cervantina en algunos autores del exilio republican / Natalia Vara Ferrero.
Summary:
"Figures of Exile contributes to the ongoing dialogue in the field of exile studies and aims to refamiliarise a wider readership with the Spanish exile of 1939. It provides new perspectives on the work of canonical figures of this exile, such as Rafael Alberti, Luís Cernuda, José Bergamín, Pedro Salinas, Francisco Ayala, Emilio Prados, Federico García Lorca or María Zambrano, and brings to the fore the work of less-studied figures like José Díaz Fernández, Juan David García Baca, Ernesto Guerra da Cal, Nuria Parés, María Luisa Elío, María Teresa León and Tomás Segovia. Rather than being disparate, this broad scope, which ranges from first generation to second generation exiles, from Galicia to Andalusia, from philosophers to poets, is testament to the wide-ranging impact of the Spanish Republican exile"-- Provided by publisher.
Series:
Iberian and Latin American studies: the arts, literature, and identity, 1662-1794 ; volume 9
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.