bulletin of hispanic studies: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies , 1953 |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies , 1923 |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 2000 Volume 77. 1 Bhs Liverpool University Press, |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 1984 Volume 61. 4 Bhs Liverpool University Press, 2008-11-17 Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 1984 Volume 61. 4 Bhs |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 2003 Volume 80. 3 Bhs Liverpool University Press, 2005 |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 2003 Volume 80. 4 Bhs Liverpool University Press, |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 1982 Volume 59. 1 Bhs Cosimo Rucellai, Girolamo Muzio, Luigi Alamanni, Francesco Guidetti, 2009 Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 1982 Volume 59. 1 Bhs |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Studies of the Spanish Mystics Edgar Allison Peers, 1927 |
bulletin of hispanic studies: The Censorship Files Alejandro Herrero-Olaizola, 2012-02-01 Drawing on extensive research in the Spanish National Archive, Alejandro Herrero-Olaizola examines the role played by the censorship apparatus of Franco's Spain in bringing about the Latin American literary Boom of the 1960s and 1970s. He reveals the negotiations and behind-the-scenes maneuvering among those involved in the Spanish publishing industry. Converging interests made strange bedfellows of the often left-wing authors and the staid officials appointed to stand guard over Francoist morality and to defend the supposed purity of Castilian Spanish. Between these two uneasily allied groups circulated larger-than-life real-world characters like the Barcelona publisher Carlos Barral and the all-powerful literary agent Carmen Balcells. The author details the fascinating story of how novels by Mario Vargas Llosa, Guillermo Cabrera Infante, Gabriel García Márquez, and Manuel Puig achieved publication in Spain, and in doing so reached a worldwide market. This colorful account underpins a compelling claim that even the most innovative and aesthetically challenging literature has its roots in the economics of the book trade, as well as the institutions of government and the exigencies of everyday politics and ideology. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 1982 Volume 59. 3 Bhs Cosimo Rucellai, Luigi Alamanni, Francesco Guidetti, 2009 Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 1982 Volume 59. 3 Bhs |
bulletin of hispanic studies: 2666 Roberto Bolaño, 2013-07-09 A NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD WINNER THE POSTHUMOUS MASTERWORK FROM ONE OF THE GREATEST AND MOST INFLUENTIAL MODERN WRITERS (JAMES WOOD, THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW) Composed in the last years of Roberto Bolaño's life, 2666 was greeted across Europe and Latin America as his highest achievement, surpassing even his previous work in its strangeness, beauty, and scope. Its throng of unforgettable characters includes academics and convicts, an American sportswriter, an elusive German novelist, and a teenage student and her widowed, mentally unstable father. Their lives intersect in the urban sprawl of SantaTeresa—a fictional Juárez—on the U.S.-Mexico border, where hundreds of young factory workers, in the novel as in life, have disappeared. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Bulletin of Spanish Studies , 1928 |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Spanish Cultural Studies Helen Graham, 1995 This work adopts an interdisciplinary approach in its study of 20th-century Spanish culture and society, emphasizing contemporary developments. The contributors take into account major recent changes which have taken place in the context of higher education Spanish studies. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Contested Identities in Costa Rica Liz Harvey-Kattou, 2019 Contested Identities in Costa Rica explores the concept of national identity within the paradigm of the dominant image of the traditional and idealised tico. Considering literature from the 1970s and cinema from the twenty-first century, it analyses how this identity has been challenged through the soft power of creative protest. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Spanish-American Fiction Bulletin of Hispanic Studies Staff, 1989-01-01 |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Bulletin of Spanish Studies , 1964 |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Pícaro and Cortesano Felipe E. Ruan, 2011-11-16 In this book on the relationship between pícaro and cortesano, Felipe E. Ruan argues that these two cultural figures are linked by a shared form of deportment centered on prudent self-accommodation. This behavior is generated and governed by a courtly ethos or habitus that emerges as the result of the growth and influence of the court in Madrid. Ruan posits that both pícaro and cortesano, and their respective books, conduct manual and picaresque narrative, tacitly engage questions of identity and individualism by highlighting the valued resources or forms of capital that come to fashion and sustain self-identity. He places the books of the pícaro and cortesano within the larger polemic of early modern identity and individualism, and offers an account of the individual as agent whose actions are grounded on objective social relations, without those actions being simply the result of mechanistic adherence to the social order. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Intersected Identities Erica Segre, 2007 There has always been an important visual element to the construction and questioning of national identity in post-Independence Mexico, though one that has not always been given its due, outside of the celebrated and much-studied muralists. Ranging from the early nineteenth century to the present - from the vogue for the picturesque, illustrated periodicals and the influential writings of Altamirano to a wealth of twentieth-century graphic artists, filmmakers and photographers - this book re-examines the complex variety of ways in which that visual element has operated. In particular, it looks at the ways in which discourses concerning ethnicity and cultural hybridity have been echoed and transformed in Mexican visual culture, resulting in fields of visual discourse which are eclectic and increasingly self-reflexive. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: The Configuration of the Spanish Public Sphere David Jiménez Torres, Leticia Villamediana González, 2019-06-06 Since the explosion of the indignados movement beginning in 2011, there has been a renewed interest in the concept of the “public sphere” in a Spanish context: how it relates to society and to political power, and how it has evolved over the centuries. The Configuration of the Spanish Public Sphere brings together contributions from leading scholars in Hispanic studies, across a wide range of disciplines, to investigate various aspects of these processes, offering a long-term, panoramic view that touches on one of the most urgent issues for contemporary European societies. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Hearing Voices Sarah Finley, 2019-02-01 Hearing Voices takes a fresh look at sound in the poetry and prose of colonial Latin American poet and nun Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz (1648/51–95). A voracious autodidact, Sor Juana engaged with early modern music culture in a way that resonates deeply in her writing. Despite the privileging of harmony within Sor Juana’s work, however, links between the poet’s musical inheritance and subjects such as acoustics, cognition, writing, and visual art have remained unexplored. These lacunae have marginalized nonmusical aurality and contributed to the persistence of both ocularcentrism and a corresponding visual dominance in scholarship on Sor Juana—and indeed in early modern cultural production in general. As in many areas of her work, Sor Juana’s engagement with acoustical themes restructures gendered discourses and transposes them to a feminine key. Hearing Voices focuses on these aural conceits in highlighting the importance of sound and—in most cases—its relationship with gender in Sor Juana’s work and early modern culture. Sarah Finley explores attitudes toward women’s voices and music making; intersections of music, rhetoric, and painting; aurality in Baroque visual art; sound and ritual; and the connections between optics and acoustics. Finley demonstrates how Sor Juana’s striking aurality challenges ocularcentric interpretations and problematizes paradigms that pin vision to logos, writing, and other empirical models that traditionally favor men’s voices. Sound becomes a vehicle for women’s agency and responds to anxiety about the female voice, particularly in early modern convent culture. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Foundational Arts Michael Karl Schuessler, 2014-01-02 Foundational Arts examines how the relationships between mural painting and missionary theater became a transcultural process for mass conversion of Native populations to Christianity. Michael K. Schuessler studies the New World expressions of dramatic and plastic arts and how they became the tools of European friars to Christianize Native peoples and ultimately create a new and unique literary and artistic tradition. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Hispanas de Queens Milagros Ricourt, Ruby Danta, 2003 Part I. Neighborhood life and experiential Latino panethnicity -- Introducing Corona -- Women and convivencia diaria -- Stores, workplaces, and public space -- Roman Catholic parishes -- Protestant churches -- Part II. Female leadership and institutional Latino panethnicity -- Introducing Latino organizations in Queens -- Social service organizations -- Cultural politics -- Formal politics -- Conclusion : Women and the creation of Latino panethnicity. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Before Bemberg Matt Losada, 2020-09-18 A history of the gendered division of labor in Argentine Cinema -- Eva Landeck -- Beauvoir before Bemberg : Lah, Avellaneda-Walsh, Bemberg. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Transborder Media Spaces Ingrid Kummels, 2017-07-01 Transborder Media Spaces offers a new perspective on how media forms like photography, video, radio, television, and the Internet have been appropriated by Mexican indigenous people in the light of transnational migration and ethnopolitical movements. In producing and consuming self-determined media genres, actors in Tamazulapam Mixe and its diaspora community in Los Angeles open up media spaces and seek to forge more equal relations both within Mexico and beyond its borders. It is within these spaces that Ayuujk people carve out their own, at times conflicting, visions of development, modernity, gender, and what it means to be indigenous in the twenty-first century. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: The Battle over Spanish between 1800 and 2000 Luis Gabriel-Stheeman, José del Valle, 2003-09-02 This book examines the way in which a group of key Spanish and Latin American intellectuals of the nineteenth and twentieth-centuries discussed the concept of the Spanish language. The contributors analyse the ways in which these discussions related to the construction of national identities and the idea of an Hispanic culture. This book will be essential reading for sociolinguists, scholars of the Spanish language, historians of the Hispanic culture, and all those with an interest in the relationship between language and culture. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Tastemakers and Tastemaking Niamh Thornton, 2020-12-01 Tastemakers and Tastemaking develops a new approach to analyzing violence in Mexican films and television by examining the curation of violence in relation to three key moments: the decade-long centennial commemoration of the Mexican Revolution launched in 2010; the assaults and murders of women in Northern Mexico since the late 1990s; and the havoc wreaked by the illegal drug trade since the early 2000s. Niamh Thornton considers how violence is created, mediated, selected, or categorized by tastemakers, through the strategic choices made by institutions, filmmakers, actors, and critics. Challenging assumptions about whose and what kind of work merit attention and traversing normative boundaries between good and bad taste, Thornton draws attention to the role of tastemaking in both high and low media, including film cycles and festivals, adaptations of Mariano Azuela's 1915 novel, Los de Abajo, Amat Escalante's hyperrealist art films, and female stars of recent genre films and the telenovela, La reina del sur. Making extensive use of videographic criticism, Thornton pays particularly close attention to the gendered dimensions of violence, both on and off screen. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: A Visit from St. Nicholas Clement Clarke Moore, 1921 A poem about the visit that Santa Claus pays to the children of the world during the night before every Christmas. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Deadline Robert Samet, 2019-07-08 Since 2006, Venezuela has had the highest homicide rate in South America and one of the highest levels of gun violence in the world. Former president Hugo Chávez, who died in 2013, downplayed the extent of violent crime and instead emphasized rehabilitation. His successor, President Nicolás Maduro, took the opposite approach, declaring an all-out war on crime (mano dura). What accounts for this drastic shift toward more punitive measures? In Deadline, anthropologist Robert Samet answers this question by focusing on the relationship between populism, the press, and what he calls “the will to security.” Drawing on nearly a decade of ethnographic research alongside journalists on the Caracas crime beat, he shows how the media shaped the politics of security from the ground up. Paradoxically, Venezuela’s punitive turn was not the product of dictatorship, but rather an outgrowth of practices and institutions normally associated with democracy. Samet reckons with this apparent contradiction by exploring the circulation of extralegal denuncias (accusations) by crime journalists, editors, sources, and audiences. Denuncias are a form of public shaming or exposé that channels popular anger against the powers that be. By showing how denuncias mobilize dissent, Deadline weaves a much larger tale about the relationship between the press, popular outrage, and the politics of security in the twenty-first century. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Burning Darkness Joan Ramon Resina, 2008-07-16 Encourages a deep reading of a selection of essential Spanish films. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Lorca's Late Poetry Andrew A. Anderson, 1990 Federico García Lorca (1898-1938), is often thought of as a fine lyric poet of the 1920s who then developed into one of Spain's greatest playwrights (1931-36). But other aspects of Lorca's literary career are equally significant: the earlier theatrical pieces, which he had started writing by 1918, the bold, experimental, expressionist plays of 1930-31, and (the subject of this volume) the later poetry written as his powers as a dramatist matured in the 1930s. Professor Anderson's book is the first in any language to focus specifically on Lorca's poetic output from 1931 to 1936. It offers extensive, detailed analyses of all the poetry composed during that period: Diván del Tamarit with its Arab-Andalusian flavour and stylization, the Llanto por Ignacio Sánchez Mejías, a sustained lament on the death of a bullfighter friend, Seis poemas galegos, and Sonetos, love poetry echoing Petrarch, Shakespeare and Góngora - four collections equal or superior in quality, power and suggestiveness to Lorca's canonic poetical works. Adopting a literary-critical approach based on the close reading of individual texts, with relevant background information, Professor Anderson elaborates on the themes and techniques, imagery and symbolism, strengths and weaknesses, of each poem in the four collections. Thereby he can relate this corpus to the whole of Lorca's work, showing that it cannot be neatly categorized under any of the avant-garde -isms prevalent in the 1920s and 1930s. His arguments for a revised appraisal of Lorca's creative development lead to a compelling case for a re-evaluation of his late poetry. An Appendix gives English translations of all the poems under discussion (other Spanish quotations are translated in the text), and there is a fifteen-page bibliography of primary and secondary material. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Exotic Nation Barbara Fuchs, 2011-12-30 In the Western imagination, Spain often evokes the colorful culture of al-Andalus, the Iberian region once ruled by Muslims. Tourist brochures inviting visitors to sunny and romantic Andalusia, home of the ingenious gardens and intricate arabesques of Granada's Alhambra Palace, are not the first texts to trade on Spain's relationship to its Moorish past. Despite the fall of Granada to the Catholic Monarchs in 1492 and the subsequent repression of Islam in Spain, Moorish civilization continued to influence both the reality and the perception of the Christian nation that emerged in place of al-Andalus. In Exotic Nation, Barbara Fuchs explores the paradoxes in the cultural construction of Spain in relation to its Moorish heritage through an analysis of Spanish literature, costume, language, architecture, and chivalric practices. Between 1492 and the expulsion of the Moriscos (Muslims forcibly converted to Christianity) in 1609, Spain attempted to come to terms with its own Moorishness by simultaneously repressing Muslim subjects and appropriating their rich cultural heritage. Fuchs examines the explicit romanticization of the Moors in Spanish literature—often referred to as literary maurophilia—and the complex, often silent presence of Moorish forms in Spanish material culture. The extensive hybridization of Iberian culture suggests that the sympathetic depiction of Moors in the literature of the period does not trade in exoticism but instead reminded Spaniards of the place of Moors and their descendants within Spain. Meanwhile, observers from outside Spain recognized its cultural debt to al-Andalus, often deliberately casting Spain as the exotic racial other of Europe. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Spanish Culture from Romanticism to the Present Jo Labanyi, 2019 This publication makes available two decades of work by the pioneering scholar of Spanish cultural studies, Jo Labanyi, covering literature, cinema, painting, photography, and memory studies, with a frequent focus on gender. The essays explore the ways in which cultural texts serve as a vehicle for negotiating cultural anxieties, through their encoding of emotional structures that reveal social tensions and contradictions. The discussion of a wide range of Spanish texts, from the early nineteenth-century to the present, traces stages in the history of the emotions and their imbrication in political processes. The essays have in common an attempt to read against the grain; in many cases, the focus on gender is what makes that possible.--Publisher's website. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Spanish Lessons Paul Julian Smith, 2017-09 Introduction: film, television, transmedia -- Film. Spanish cinema of the 1980s -- Madrid de Cine: Spanish film screenings -- Almodóvar's self-fashioning: the economics and aesthetics of post-auteurism -- Television. Media migration and cultural proximity: a specimen season of television drama -- LGBT TV Catalonia -- Televisual properties: the construction bubble in three TV series -- (Re)turn to transmedia. Towards transmedia: past and present of cinema and television in Spain -- A new paradigm for the Spanish audiovisual sector?: quality television/popular cinema -- Crisis fictions: novel, cinema, tv -- Conclusion: the audiovisual field in contemporary Spain |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Curious Encounters Adriana Craciun, Mary Terrall, 2019-01-01 With contributions from historians, literary critics, and geographers, Curious Encounters uncovers a rich history of global voyaging, collecting, and scientific exploration in the long eighteenth century. Leaving behind grand narratives of discovery, these essays collectively restore a degree of symmetry and contingency to our understanding of encounters between European and Indigenous people. To do this the essays consider diverse agents of historical change, both human and inanimate: commodities, curiosities, texts, animals, and specimens moved through their own global circuits of knowledge and power. The voyages and collections rediscovered here do not move from a European center to a distant periphery, nor do they position European authorities as the central agents of this early era of globalization. Long distance voyagers from Greenland to the Ottoman Empire crossed paths with French, British, Polynesian, and Spanish travelers across the world, trading objects and knowledge for diverse ends. The dynamic contact zones of these curious encounters include the ice floes of the Arctic, the sociable spaces of the tea table, the hybrid material texts and objects in imperial archives, and the collections belonging to key figures of the Enlightenment, including Sir Hans Sloane and James Petiver. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: The Spanish Pacific, 1521-1815 Christina H. Lee, Ricardo Padrón, 2020 The Spanish Pacific designates the space Spain colonized or aspired to rule in Asia between 1521 -- with the arrival of Ferdinand Magellan -- and 1815 -- the end of the Manila-Acapulco galleon trade route. It encompasses what we identify today as the Philippines and the Marianas, but also Spanish America, China, Japan, and other parts of Asia that in the Spanish imagination were extensions of its Latin American colonies. This reader provides a selection of documents relevant to the encounters and entanglements that arose in the Spanish Pacific among Europeans, Spanish Americans, and Asians while highlighting the role of natives, mestizos, and women. A-first-of-its-kind, each of the documents in this collection was selected, translated into English, and edited by a different scholar in the field of early modern Spanish Pacific studies, who also provided commentary and bibliography. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: The Poetry of Salvador Espriu D. Gareth Walters, 2006 Two standpoints govern the approach taken to the poetry of Salvador Espriu in this extended study of his work. First, the author explores the structural implications of symmetry and numerology, in a chronological rather than thematic survey of the poetry - a procedure that involves a consideration of how each book attains its distinctive character while having common preoccupations and stylistic traits. Secondly, he examines the tension implicit in Espriu's poetry between involvement and detachment or between the civic and the lyric. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: The Poetics of Piracy Barbara Fuchs, 2013-02-21 Devotes considerable attention to Cardenio (the collaboration between Shakespeare and Fletcher) and its notional offspring (works by Greenblatt and Mee, Doran, Armenteros, et al.), discussing all these texts' relations to Cervantes's work and the nature of the various kinds of borrowings and influences. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Tropes of Enlightenment in the Age of Bolivar Ronald Briggs, 2010-06-11 The life and work of a mentor to Simon Bolivar |
bulletin of hispanic studies: The Prado Eugenia Afinoguénova, 2020-04-15 Explores the history of Spain's most iconic art museum. Highlights the political history of the museum's relation to the monarchy, the church, and the liberal nation state, as well as its role as an extension of Madrid's social center, the Prado Promenade. |
bulletin of hispanic studies: Modernism and the Avant-garde Body in Spain and Italy Nicolas Fernandez-Medina, Maria Truglio, 2016-03-22 This interdisciplinary volume interrogates bodily thinking in avant-garde texts from Spain and Italy during the early twentieth century and their relevance to larger modernist preoccupations with corporeality. It examines the innovative ways Spanish and Italian avant-gardists explored the body as a locus for various aesthetic and sociopolitical considerations and practices. In reimagining the nexus points where the embodied self and world intersect, the texts surveyed in this book not only shed light on issues such as authority, desire, fetishism, gender, patriarchy, politics, religion, sexuality, subjectivity, violence, and war during a period of unprecedented change, but also explore the complexities of aesthetic and epistemic rupture (and continuity) within Spanish and Italian modernisms. Building on contemporary scholarship in Modernist Studies and avant-garde criticism, this volume brings to light numerous cross-cultural touch points between Spain and Italy, and challenges the center/periphery frameworks of European cultural modernism. In linking disciplines, genres, —isms, and geographical spheres, the book provides new lenses through which to explore the narratives of modernist corporeality. Each contribution centers around the question of the body as it was actively being debated through the medium of poetic, literary, and artistic exchange, exploring the body in its materiality and form, in its sociopolitical representation, relation to Self, cultural formation, spatiality, desires, objectification, commercialization, and aesthetic functions. This comparative approach to Spanish and Italian avant-gardism offers readers an expanded view of the intersections of body and text, broadening the conversation in the larger fields of cultural modernism, European Avant-garde Studies, and Comparative Literature. |
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Bulletin for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies 39.1 (2014): 144-47 Rechtsgeschichte / Legal History: Journal of the Max Planck Institute for European Legal History 22 (2014): 363-65 …
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University of Puget Sound 1500 N. Warner St. Tacoma, WA 98416 Pugetsound.edu Information Center: 253.879.3100 Admissions: 253.879.3211, admission@pugetsound.edu ...
JORGE CANIZARES-ESGUERRA
Evelyn Jennings, Bulletin Hispanic Studies 91 (2014) 1: 92-95 11. Nature, Empire, and Nation. Explorations of the History of Science in the Iberian World ( Stanford University Press, 2006). …
BA - Spanish - Hispanic Studies Concentration - First Time …
Bachelor of Arts - Spanish - Hispanic Studies Concentration First Time Freshman Academic Roadmap Year 1: Freshman Year Year Total 31 Fall Semester Terms Offered Prerequisite Courses …
'Tiempo de silencio': An Analysis - JSTOR
TIEMPO DE SILENCIO: AN ANALYSIS Martin-Santos' novel, Tiempo de silencio, is largely structured upon his social and moral vision. He expresses this vision within the frame of an existential
JORGE CANIZARES-ESGUERRA - FLACSO
Evelyn Jennings, Bulletin Hispanic Studies 91 (2014) 1: 92-95 11. Nature, Empire, and Nation. Explorations of the History of Science in the Iberian World ( Stanford University Press, 2006). …
QUEENS COLLEGE Undergraduate Graduate Bulletin Bulletin
Graduate Bulletin 2018–2019 QUEENS COLLEGE Undergraduate Bulletin 2020–2021. Undergraduate Bulletin 2020–2021 ... Film Studies 235 Global Studies 236 Hispanic Languages & …
Hispanic Studies and Researches on Spain, Portugal and Latin …
history, theology, history, literary studies and gender studies. The collection is divided into two primary parts: ‘Santa Teresa y su época’ encompasses multidisciplinary studies on diverse …
Argentina y el exilio republicano de 1939: las fronteras y el ...
LIDIA BOCANEGRA BARBECHO 1 Ref. Bibliográfica Bocanegra Barbecho, Lidia; Argentina y el exilio republicano de 1939: las fronteras y el movimiento de solidaridad, Bulletin of Spanish Studies: …
Majors, Minors, and Other Programs of Study - Columbia …
•Hispanic Studies •History •History and Theory of Architecture •Human Rights •Italian •Jazz Studies •Jewish Studies •Latin American and Caribbean Studies •Linguistics •Mathematics •Medieval and …
ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS
Press, 2015) in The Bulletin for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies, 41:1, Article 13 (2016) ... (New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2008), Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 90:3 (April 2013) Article: …
Hispanic American Studies in France Since the War - JSTOR
Hispanic studies in France are centered in two cities-Bordeaux and ... Bordeaux's prominence in the Hispanic field rests on the firm foundation of the Bulletin Hispanique and the Institut d'Ltudes …
2 Decolonising Renewable Energy: Aeolian Aesthetics in the …
5 access to the country’s fisheries and a 33 per cent share in Western Sahara’s rich phosphates industry. Several thousand Saharawis fled the invading armies.
Mechanical Imagery In Spanish Golden Age Poetry (book)
reading in the field of Colonial and Spanish Enlightenment Studies Bulletin of Hispanic Studies The Return of Astraea Frederick A. de Armas,2021-03-17 In classical mythology Astraea the goddess …
Territories of the Visual in Spain
regular Visual Studies issue of the Bulletin of Spanish Studies, along with the ever-expanding boundaries of a discipline whose mobile focus of inquiry is indicated in the Bulletin’s lengthy …
All E FOLLOWING JOURNALS WERE - JSTOR
Harvard Library Bulletin Hispanic American Historical Review Hopkins Quarterly Huntington Library Quarterly Irish Historical Studies Acronym AH AHR AL AQ ASch AR BYUS Cliol CSE CritI Criticism …