13 articles in this issue
María Xesús Lama López
Abstract: Panoramic study on Álvaro Cunqueiro and cunqueirian studies’ contact and exchanges with Catalan culture as a presentation of the context of intercultural relationships in which this monograph falls. The three areas dealt with, in a diverse criti... see more
Adolfo Sotelo Vázquez
The aim of this article is to document and date, in detail, the relations between Cunqueiro and distinguished Catalan intellectuals in the 1950s and 1960s from memorial texts, news in journals and authors’ testimonies. Thus we can establish the chronology... see more
Blanca Ripoll Sintes
Although Álvaro Cunqueiro had worked closely as a writer in the weekly magazine Destino during the early Spanish post-war period, it was not until the sixties that he was once again present in Destino’s cultural pages. It was then, during the last throes ... see more
María Liñeira
This article examines the relationship between food and identity, taking as a case-study the gastronomic literature of the galeguista writer Álvaro Cunqueiro, mediator of Galician culture in the Spanish cultural field. This paper presents a reflection on ... see more
João Medina
Zé Povinho, the known figure created by Bordalo, has been always considered a manifestation of Portugal’s self-image, in spite of his ridiculing, even degrading, characteristics. This figure is comparable with other collective caricatures appearing in Ita... see more
Thiago Saltarelli
This paper aims to investigate how mimesis rules Brazilian colonial literary production, considering a tension between its understanding as an imitation of nature or human actions and as an emulation of canonical authors and rhetorical topics. We propose ... see more
Gisele Wolkoff
While gathering together both central and marginal authors, this paper intends to both redefine the importance of a possible feminine aesthetic in Portugal today, as well as to go back to discussions implied in concepts of identity and belonging. Finally,... see more
Mônica Sant’Anna
This article offers an analysis of two of Maria Teresa Horta’s narrative titles Ambas as mãos sobre o corpo and Ema, where we observe that women were historically conditioned and trapped within a silent, submissive, reclusive and obedient web, under the m... see more
Jordi Cerdà Subirachs
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Diego Giménez
María Xesús Nogueira
Antonio Francisco Pedrós-Gascón