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Power and Dissent
Larra and Democracy in Nineteenth-Century Spain
Donald E. Schurlknight
An investigation into how Larra (pseudonym Fígaro) exposes the power relations that exist between and among individuals and the classes that form 'society,' this work provides a close reading in a postmodern vein of the satirical writer's duly famous articles penned and published mostly between March 1835 and the summer of 1836. Casting light on the development of Larra's thought on power relations at this critical stage of his political life, this study offers a chronological, step-by-step analysis of the evolution of Larra's thoughts on power and politics. Inspired by the practices of the new historicists, especially Michel Foucault, Schurlknight presents Larra's essays as the Romantic's own subversive discourse opposing the official discourses of truth that attempt to maintain, in the 1830s in Spain, the domination of an elitist minority over the other classes.
Details
Details
Author
Author
University Press Copublishing Division / Bucknell University Press
Pages: 188 Trim: 6½ x 9¾
978-1-61148-326-0 • Hardback • April 2009 •
$105.00
• (£81.00)
Subjects:
Literary Criticism / Reference
,
History / Europe / Spain & Portugal
,
History / Essays
,
History / General
,
Political Science / History & Theory
,
Literary Criticism / European / Spanish & Portuguese
Donald E. Schurlknight
is professor of Spanish at Wayne State University.
Power and Dissent
Larra and Democracy in Nineteenth-Century Spain
Hardback
$105.00
Summary
Summary
An investigation into how Larra (pseudonym Fígaro) exposes the power relations that exist between and among individuals and the classes that form 'society,' this work provides a close reading in a postmodern vein of the satirical writer's duly famous articles penned and published mostly between March 1835 and the summer of 1836. Casting light on the development of Larra's thought on power relations at this critical stage of his political life, this study offers a chronological, step-by-step analysis of the evolution of Larra's thoughts on power and politics. Inspired by the practices of the new historicists, especially Michel Foucault, Schurlknight presents Larra's essays as the Romantic's own subversive discourse opposing the official discourses of truth that attempt to maintain, in the 1830s in Spain, the domination of an elitist minority over the other classes.
Details
Details
University Press Copublishing Division / Bucknell University Press
Pages: 188 Trim: 6½ x 9¾
978-1-61148-326-0 • Hardback • April 2009 •
$105.00
• (£81.00)
Subjects:
Literary Criticism / Reference
,
History / Europe / Spain & Portugal
,
History / Essays
,
History / General
,
Political Science / History & Theory
,
Literary Criticism / European / Spanish & Portuguese
Author
Author
Donald E. Schurlknight
is professor of Spanish at Wayne State University.
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