Lexington Books
Pages: 258
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-66691-177-0 • Hardback • June 2022 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
978-1-66691-178-7 • eBook • June 2022 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Philip Allen is assistant professor of Spanish at Midwestern State University in Texas.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Out of the Ashes: Lope de Vega and Modern Media
Chapter 1: Unlucky Stars: The Dictatorship’s Forbidden Films
Chapter 2: Despots and Dictators: Lope on TV and Film During the Dictatorship (1949-1975)
Chapter 3: Lope’s Leading Ladies: Adaptations for the Democratic Era (1976-2020)
Chapter 4: The Phoenix Regenerated (1935-2018)
Conclusions: The Shadow of the Phoenix
"Dr. Philip Allen provides a much needed transhistorical examination of Lope de Vega’s oeuvre and persona in other popular ’stages’ such as the filmic and televisual mediums. Allen's monograph corrects superannuated misconceptions about the reception of Lope’s life and work in contemporary times, filling important gaps in the disciplines of visual and cultural studies in relation to Peninsular early modern drama."
— Esther Fernandez, Rice University
"This book offers a ground-breaking and original perspective of the cultural reception on television and film of one of Spain's most remarkable authors. Supported by extensive archival research, it focuses on the ideological aspects behind the adaptations of Lope de Vega's life and works and it challenges and dismantles stereotypes associated with the author and his plays in modern times".
— David Arbesú, University of South Florida
"Lope de Vega on Spanish Screens, 1935-2020 presents a renewal of Lope de Vega studies within the twentieth and twenty-first century. Allen shows the importance of Lope adaptations and bipics to Spain’s political and historical national identity(ies). He dives deep into his archival work and paints a full picture of Lope de Vega’s adaptations and depictions in modernity. His vast knowledge and astute interpretations of (post-)Franco-era highlights the thought process behind dictatorship and democratic artistic productions."
— Felipe Rojas, West Liberty University