Spanish Poetry: Post-Civil War Generations & Trends
Coexistence of Generations in Spanish Poetry
After the Civil War, the Generation of 98 and 27 wrote from exile, paving the way for several generations of poets with different perspectives on their reality.
Poetic Trends
Defining main styles and currents is difficult due to overlapping influences and authors of various ages writing similar poetry. However, the following trends can be distinguished:
Formalism
Books from this current had a nationalistic approach and aimed to uplift spirits. (Dionysus Ridruego,
Read MoreReality and Poetry in Lorca’s Work: Themes and Characters
Reality and Poetry Many features and notes are taken from reality. In the first act, a surprising conversation occurs where Poncia engages in an extremely vulgar and prosaic scene while eating bread and sausage. Other elements of a realistic character in this first act include the beggar who comes to beg, the tolling of the bells for the death of Bernarda’s husband, the arrival of the notary to read the will, and the story of the father of Adelaide, among others. In the second act, realistic details
Read MoreSpanish Poetry: Renaissance to Baroque Transformation
Fundamental Changes in 16th-Century Spanish Poetry
San Juan de la Cruz and Garcilaso de la Vega initiated a transformation in Spanish poetry. The year 1526 is symbolically taken as the beginning of this change. Both poets attempted this shift, with Garcilaso achieving a higher quality of poetry. He had the merit of both the Italian influence and the initiative for a total renovation of the metric, which changed the sound of poetry.
Fundamental Changes in the Metric
Before Garcilaso, poets used two
Read MoreSpanish Grammar: Verb Tenses, Periphrasis, Adverbs
Values of Verbs
Indicates Present
- Currently: Now I see there is television – by Pedro
- Habitual: I teach economics
- Durative: Lives in that house
- Timeless: The Earth revolves around the Sun
- Historic: The Arabs reach Spain in 711
- Advance: Tomorrow we go on vacation
- Mandate: You come with me!
Indicates Imperfect Past
- Courtesy: You wanted something else?
- Imaginative: You were bad and I was the good
- Attempt: Now went out to get you
- Contrariety: Tomorrow I had to act, but the function has been suspended
- Opening: There
Cristiano Ronaldo: Early Life and Career Path
Cristiano Ronaldo: Early Life and Career
Born on February 5, 1985, in Funchal, Madeira Island, Portugal, Cristiano Ronaldo’s journey to becoming a football legend began in his early years. His father, Dinis Aveiro, named him after Ronald Reagan, a politician he deeply admired.
Early Career in Portugal
At the age of 10, Sporting Lisbon discovered Ronaldo. He initially played for Andorinha, a modest club in Funchal where his father worked as a kit man. He then moved to Nacional, but after six months,
Read MoreSpanish Literature in the 17th Century: Picaresque Novels and Key Authors
Spanish Prose in the 17th Century
The Decline of 16th-Century Genres
Many narrative genres from the 16th century practically disappeared in the 17th century, such as books of chivalry and pastoral novels. However, others, like the picaresque novel, experienced significant development. The Italian novella also gained importance, following the publication of Cervantes’ *Novelas Ejemplares* in 1613. In fact, the most relevant figure of 17th-century Spanish prose is precisely Cervantes, who published
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