Constructing Identity in Contemporary Spain: Theoretical Debates and Cultural Practice

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Jo Labanyi
Oxford University Press, 2002 - 343 Seiten
This volume is designed to further the study of Spanish culture in the broad sense of the network of symbolic systems through which social groups construct and negotiate a sense of identity or identities. The emphasis is on culture as a set of practices rather than as a corpus of texts. The aim is to introduce readers to current theoretical debates in a range of disciplines, as well as to inform them about specific areas of twentieth-century Spanish culture. The four sections on 'Ethnicity and Migration', 'Gender', 'Popular Culture', and 'The Local and the Global' cover ethnography, music, TV, advertising, popular literature, medical discourse, film, posters, museums, and urban development.
 

Inhalt

Travels of the Imaginary Spanish Gypsy 22
22
Flamenco as Field and Passage for
41
Ethnic and Racial Configurations in Contemporary
55
Markers of National Identity
72
The Popular Fiction
94
The Venerable Mari Carmen
113
The Sex Which Is Not One
128
La Cubanas Teresina SA
138
Populism and Hegemony in the Early
206
Star of Stage and Screen and Optimistic Punk
222
The Remixing
237
Violence Gaze and Desire
262
High Art
280
Narcissism or
294
Spanish Quality TV? The Periodistas Notebook
311
INDEX
335

Popular
154
Fiesta Culture in Madrid Posters 19341955
178

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Autoren-Profil (2002)

Jo Labanyi is Professor of Spanish and Cultural Studies at the University of Southampton and Director of the Institute of Romance Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London. Her books include (ed. with Lou Charnon-Deutsch) Culture and Gender in Nineteenth-Century Spain (1995), (ed. with Helen Graham) Spanish Cultural Studies (1995), and Gender and Modernization in the Spanish Realist Novel (2000), all published by Oxford University Press.

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