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Writing Teresa examines the essays and works of five turn-of-the-twentieth-century authors devoted to Teresa de Jesús (St. Teresa of Ávila, 1515-1582).
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Writing Teresa examines the essays and works of five turn-of-the-twentieth-century authors devoted to Teresa de Jesús (St. Teresa of Ávila, 1515-1582).
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc/Bloomsbury
- Seitenzahl: 306
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Dezember 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 650g
- ISBN-13: 9781611484069
- ISBN-10: 1611484065
- Artikelnr.: 34111778
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc/Bloomsbury
- Seitenzahl: 306
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Dezember 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 650g
- ISBN-13: 9781611484069
- ISBN-10: 1611484065
- Artikelnr.: 34111778
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Denise DuPont is associate professor of Spanish at Southern Methodist University.
Acknowledgments Introduction. An Hour with Teresa: The Saint and Her
Interpreters Science, Mysticism, Spiritualism, and the Feminine Catholicism
in Nineteenth-Century Spain: Teresa as Popular Holy Mother Nationalizing
Teresa: The Third Centennial, and Political Divisions Creating National
Culture: The Role of Scholars Fin-de-siglo Exploration of Spanish Identity:
The Saintly Hero in Literature Teresa in Turn-of-the-Century Spain: Male
and Female Perspectives Stories of Teresa in Clarín, Pardo Bazán, Unamuno,
Azorín, and Blanca de los Ríos An Hour with Teresa (1880-1930) Chapter
One. Clarín's Teresa: the faith of the mother Teresa: national pathology or
national project? Clarín as critic: On Marcelino Menéndez Pelayo and Benito
Pérez Galdós La Regenta: Female Affliction and Male Desire Mothers, Nuns,
and supercherías Saintly Pairs: Salvation for Clarín and the Nation
Chapter Two. Emilia Pardo Bazán and Teresa de Jesús, in public and private
Franciscanism, Mysticism and the Heroic Woman Writer A Model for Women:
Teresa on the National Stage Sainthood and Superiority: La Quimera and
Dulce Dueño Postscript: Teresa and the Return to Community Chapter Three.
Unamuno and the Agony of Teresa En torno al casticismo: Teresa's Interior
Castles Vida de Don Quijote y Sancho: Divine Quijotess Del sentimiento
trágico de la vida: The Agonies of Teresa as Super-Self La tía Tula: Teresa
and Her Family Unamuno, Poet: A Lyrics of Teresa Additional Agony, and
Dreams of Liberty Chapter Four. Heroism and Humility: Azorín Writes Teresa
The Early Years, and the Unbearable Whiteness of the Eternal Feminine The
Past is not Present: Teresa's Inaccessibility and the Author's Doubts
Bringing the Classics to Life Authority and Intervention: Rescuing Teresa
Fictions and Fantasies of Teresa's Savior and Disciple "La humildad es la
verdad": Final Lessons from Teresa Chapter Five. Blanca de los Ríos:
Teresa as Mother of Tradition The Women of Tirso: Teresa in Gabriel Téllez
Teresa as Hero: Linguistic Maternity and the Woman's Pen Addressing Women:
Teresa in Blanca de los Ríos's Present A Teresa for the Future
Conclusion. Public and Private Teresas Works Cited
Interpreters Science, Mysticism, Spiritualism, and the Feminine Catholicism
in Nineteenth-Century Spain: Teresa as Popular Holy Mother Nationalizing
Teresa: The Third Centennial, and Political Divisions Creating National
Culture: The Role of Scholars Fin-de-siglo Exploration of Spanish Identity:
The Saintly Hero in Literature Teresa in Turn-of-the-Century Spain: Male
and Female Perspectives Stories of Teresa in Clarín, Pardo Bazán, Unamuno,
Azorín, and Blanca de los Ríos An Hour with Teresa (1880-1930) Chapter
One. Clarín's Teresa: the faith of the mother Teresa: national pathology or
national project? Clarín as critic: On Marcelino Menéndez Pelayo and Benito
Pérez Galdós La Regenta: Female Affliction and Male Desire Mothers, Nuns,
and supercherías Saintly Pairs: Salvation for Clarín and the Nation
Chapter Two. Emilia Pardo Bazán and Teresa de Jesús, in public and private
Franciscanism, Mysticism and the Heroic Woman Writer A Model for Women:
Teresa on the National Stage Sainthood and Superiority: La Quimera and
Dulce Dueño Postscript: Teresa and the Return to Community Chapter Three.
Unamuno and the Agony of Teresa En torno al casticismo: Teresa's Interior
Castles Vida de Don Quijote y Sancho: Divine Quijotess Del sentimiento
trágico de la vida: The Agonies of Teresa as Super-Self La tía Tula: Teresa
and Her Family Unamuno, Poet: A Lyrics of Teresa Additional Agony, and
Dreams of Liberty Chapter Four. Heroism and Humility: Azorín Writes Teresa
The Early Years, and the Unbearable Whiteness of the Eternal Feminine The
Past is not Present: Teresa's Inaccessibility and the Author's Doubts
Bringing the Classics to Life Authority and Intervention: Rescuing Teresa
Fictions and Fantasies of Teresa's Savior and Disciple "La humildad es la
verdad": Final Lessons from Teresa Chapter Five. Blanca de los Ríos:
Teresa as Mother of Tradition The Women of Tirso: Teresa in Gabriel Téllez
Teresa as Hero: Linguistic Maternity and the Woman's Pen Addressing Women:
Teresa in Blanca de los Ríos's Present A Teresa for the Future
Conclusion. Public and Private Teresas Works Cited
Acknowledgments Introduction. An Hour with Teresa: The Saint and Her
Interpreters Science, Mysticism, Spiritualism, and the Feminine Catholicism
in Nineteenth-Century Spain: Teresa as Popular Holy Mother Nationalizing
Teresa: The Third Centennial, and Political Divisions Creating National
Culture: The Role of Scholars Fin-de-siglo Exploration of Spanish Identity:
The Saintly Hero in Literature Teresa in Turn-of-the-Century Spain: Male
and Female Perspectives Stories of Teresa in Clarín, Pardo Bazán, Unamuno,
Azorín, and Blanca de los Ríos An Hour with Teresa (1880-1930) Chapter
One. Clarín's Teresa: the faith of the mother Teresa: national pathology or
national project? Clarín as critic: On Marcelino Menéndez Pelayo and Benito
Pérez Galdós La Regenta: Female Affliction and Male Desire Mothers, Nuns,
and supercherías Saintly Pairs: Salvation for Clarín and the Nation
Chapter Two. Emilia Pardo Bazán and Teresa de Jesús, in public and private
Franciscanism, Mysticism and the Heroic Woman Writer A Model for Women:
Teresa on the National Stage Sainthood and Superiority: La Quimera and
Dulce Dueño Postscript: Teresa and the Return to Community Chapter Three.
Unamuno and the Agony of Teresa En torno al casticismo: Teresa's Interior
Castles Vida de Don Quijote y Sancho: Divine Quijotess Del sentimiento
trágico de la vida: The Agonies of Teresa as Super-Self La tía Tula: Teresa
and Her Family Unamuno, Poet: A Lyrics of Teresa Additional Agony, and
Dreams of Liberty Chapter Four. Heroism and Humility: Azorín Writes Teresa
The Early Years, and the Unbearable Whiteness of the Eternal Feminine The
Past is not Present: Teresa's Inaccessibility and the Author's Doubts
Bringing the Classics to Life Authority and Intervention: Rescuing Teresa
Fictions and Fantasies of Teresa's Savior and Disciple "La humildad es la
verdad": Final Lessons from Teresa Chapter Five. Blanca de los Ríos:
Teresa as Mother of Tradition The Women of Tirso: Teresa in Gabriel Téllez
Teresa as Hero: Linguistic Maternity and the Woman's Pen Addressing Women:
Teresa in Blanca de los Ríos's Present A Teresa for the Future
Conclusion. Public and Private Teresas Works Cited
Interpreters Science, Mysticism, Spiritualism, and the Feminine Catholicism
in Nineteenth-Century Spain: Teresa as Popular Holy Mother Nationalizing
Teresa: The Third Centennial, and Political Divisions Creating National
Culture: The Role of Scholars Fin-de-siglo Exploration of Spanish Identity:
The Saintly Hero in Literature Teresa in Turn-of-the-Century Spain: Male
and Female Perspectives Stories of Teresa in Clarín, Pardo Bazán, Unamuno,
Azorín, and Blanca de los Ríos An Hour with Teresa (1880-1930) Chapter
One. Clarín's Teresa: the faith of the mother Teresa: national pathology or
national project? Clarín as critic: On Marcelino Menéndez Pelayo and Benito
Pérez Galdós La Regenta: Female Affliction and Male Desire Mothers, Nuns,
and supercherías Saintly Pairs: Salvation for Clarín and the Nation
Chapter Two. Emilia Pardo Bazán and Teresa de Jesús, in public and private
Franciscanism, Mysticism and the Heroic Woman Writer A Model for Women:
Teresa on the National Stage Sainthood and Superiority: La Quimera and
Dulce Dueño Postscript: Teresa and the Return to Community Chapter Three.
Unamuno and the Agony of Teresa En torno al casticismo: Teresa's Interior
Castles Vida de Don Quijote y Sancho: Divine Quijotess Del sentimiento
trágico de la vida: The Agonies of Teresa as Super-Self La tía Tula: Teresa
and Her Family Unamuno, Poet: A Lyrics of Teresa Additional Agony, and
Dreams of Liberty Chapter Four. Heroism and Humility: Azorín Writes Teresa
The Early Years, and the Unbearable Whiteness of the Eternal Feminine The
Past is not Present: Teresa's Inaccessibility and the Author's Doubts
Bringing the Classics to Life Authority and Intervention: Rescuing Teresa
Fictions and Fantasies of Teresa's Savior and Disciple "La humildad es la
verdad": Final Lessons from Teresa Chapter Five. Blanca de los Ríos:
Teresa as Mother of Tradition The Women of Tirso: Teresa in Gabriel Téllez
Teresa as Hero: Linguistic Maternity and the Woman's Pen Addressing Women:
Teresa in Blanca de los Ríos's Present A Teresa for the Future
Conclusion. Public and Private Teresas Works Cited