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Jeffrey Zamostny & Susan Larson 
Kiosk Literature of Silver Age Spain 
Modernity and Mass Culture

Soporte

The so-called ‘Silver Age’ of Spain ran from 1898 to the rise of Franco in 1939 and was characterized by intense urbanization, widespread class struggle and mobility and a boom in mass culture. This book offers a close look at one manifestation of that mass culture: weekly collections of short, often pocket-sized books sold in urban kiosks at low prices. These series published a wide range of literature in a variety of genres and formats,  but their role as disseminators of erotic and anarchist fiction led them to be censored by the Franco dictatorship. This book offers the most detailed scholarly analysis of kiosk literature to date, examining the kiosk phenomenon through the lens of contemporary interdisciplinary theories of urban space, visuality, celebrity, gender and sexuality, and the digital humanities.

€62.99
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Tabla de materias

Illustrations


Note on Translations


Commonly Cited Literary Collections


Acknowledgments


Introduction Kiosk Literature and the Enduring Ephemeral 
Jeffrey Zamostny


Chapter 1 Literary Collections
Alberto Sánchez Álvarez-Insúa


Chapter 2 Between Secrets and Simulations: Women Writers in La Novela de Noche
Carmen M. Pujante Segura


Chapter 3 Backward Modernity? The Masculine Lesbian in Spanish Sicaliptic Literature
Itziar Rodríguez de Rivera


Chapter 4 Literary Medicine, Medical Literature: César Juarros and La Novela de Hoy
Ryan A. Davis


Chapter 5 Celebrity, Sex, and Mass Readership: The Case of Álvaro Retana
Noël Valis


Chapter 6 Virtual Álvaro Retana: Recovery and Fandom in the Digital Age
Jeffrey Zamostny


Chapter 7 Cinema Literacy in Cinema Fan Magazines and the Novela Cinematográfica
Eva Woods Peiró


Color Section


Chapter 8 Technology, Cosmopolitanism, and Female Sexuality in La Novela Semanal Cinematográfica (1922–32)
Patricia Barrera Velasco


Chapter 9 La Novela Femenina: A Collection by Women Writers in the 1920s
Ángela Ena Bordonada


Chapter 10 Getting Away with Wife Murder: Article 438 in the Press and Popular Fiction
Leslie Maxwell Kaiura


Chapter 11 Carmen de Burgos: Teaching Women of the Modern Age
Michelle M. Sharp


Chapter 12 Sports-Themed Kiosk Novelettes and the Silver Age Debate on Tradition and Modernity
Luis F. Cuesta


Chapter 13 Joaquín Belda’s “Tourist Postcards”: The Origin and Foil of His Novels (1924–31)
Manuel Martínez Arnaldos


Chapter 14 Reading and the Street: An Inventory of Madrid Kiosks in 1911
Edward Baker


Chapter 15 Modeling Kiosk Literary Collections for the Mnemosyne Digital Library
Dolores Romero López, José Luis Bueren Gómez-Acebo, Joaquín Gayoso-Cabada


Conclusion Kiosk Literature as a Geography of Cultural Objects
Susan Larson

Sobre el autor

Susan Larson is the Charles B. Qualia Chair of Romance Languages and Professor of Spanish Literature, Film, and Cultural Studies at Texas Tech University. She is the author of Constructing and Resisting Modernity: Madrid 1900–1936.
Idioma Inglés ● Formato EPUB ● Páginas 515 ● ISBN 9781783206674 ● Tamaño de archivo 11.0 MB ● Editor Jeffrey Zamostny & Susan Larson ● Editorial Intellect Books Ltd ● Ciudad Bristol ● País GB ● Publicado 2017 ● Edición 1 ● Descargable 24 meses ● Divisa EUR ● ID 5456629 ● Protección de copia Adobe DRM
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