Browsing Exemplaria -- V. 02, (1998) by Title
Now showing items 1-10 of 10
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Broken Images : Eliot, Lorca, Neruda and the discontinuity of Modernism
(Universidad de Huelva, 1998)T. S. Eliot's powerful trope in The Waste Land ("a heap of broken images"), which may derive in part from Tennyson's Idylls of the King, has overflowed into Lorca's Poeta en Nueva York and Neruda's Residencia en la ... -
Byron, Quevedo Redivivus
(Universidad de Huelva, 1998) -
Funciones del nombre en la configuración del personaje : un estudio comparativo en la literatura contemporánea de expresión española e inglesa (II)
(Universidad de Huelva, 1998)As indicated in the first part of this essay appearing in Exemplaria 1 (1997), the names of characters have often been carefully selected by writers of fiction, since they consider names an essential element in delimiting ... -
Heraclitus, Cernuda and Mr. Eliot
(Universidad de Huelva, 1998) -
Italia-Spagna : l'immagine riflessa
(Universidad de Huelva, 1998)This essay traces the evolution that literary images of Italy and Spain underwent in Europe during the process of national self-recognition in the Restoration period. The ideological principles and stereotypes underlying ... -
La técnica compositiva en las cantinelas de Santa Eulalia en latín y francés : estudio comparativo
(Universidad de Huelva, 1998)This essay presents a new view of the two poems by Saint Eulalia found in the famous Saint Amand manuscript, today in the collections of the Valenciennes Library. Both poems are of unusual interest: the first, written ... -
Mito, círculo, parodia : del modernismo anglosajón a la metaficción historiográfica de Pérez-Reverte
(Universidad de Huelva, 1998)This essay establishes a cultural bridge between Modernism and Postmodernism by focusing on the use of the motif of the mythic circle in Anglo-American and Hispanic writing, the latter from Spain and Latin America. ... -
Ovid, on the Birth of Love (Met. I 452 ff.)
(Universidad de Huelva, 1998)The charm of the Apollo and Daphne myth inspires admiration, particularly in its amatory facet, the aspect which has attracted most attention. But the myth also examines love and pain, alongside the elements of prophecy ... -
Romantic and quixotic heroes in detective fiction
(Universidad de Huelva, 1998)