Realism and Naturalism in 19th-Century Spanish Literature

Realism and Naturalism

Realism

Named its own cultural movement of the nineteenth-century bourgeois society, which did not please the fantasy and romantic idealism. Main features of realistic literature are the following:

  • Observation and accurate description of reality. The writers come to scoring ground on i.e. documented notes about characters or settings, or consult books, which extract accurate information.
  • Location of upcoming events. The authors write realistically about what they know. The eye
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The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha: A Literary Analysis

The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha

1. Introduction

Undoubtedly, the work that has immortalized Cervantes is the story of The Ingenious Hidalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha. Its initial purpose was to parody the chivalric novels, a popular genre at the time. However, it also serves as an invective against books of chivalry. Censorship of this type of novel was not exclusive to Cervantes; a series of authors and critics considered this genre harmful because it told stories to the common people,

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20th Century Spanish Poetry

Luis Cernuda (1902-1963)

Born in Seville, Cernuda graduated in law but decided to dedicate himself to literature. He became a Spanish teaching assistant at the Ecole Normale de Toulouse and later lived in Madrid. During the Civil War, he was exiled to England and never returned to Spain, teaching in English and American universities. In 1952, he moved to Mexico, where he died. Cernuda lived a lonely and painful life, feeling like an outsider, perhaps due to his homosexuality, which led to isolation

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Generation of ’27: Exploring the Spanish Poetic Renaissance

Generation of ’27: A Poetic Revolution in Spain

Aesthetic Renovation and Literary Tradition

The Generation of ’27 spearheaded an aesthetic movement to revitalize Spanish poetry. This group of poets embraced avant-garde innovations while honoring the rich Spanish literary tradition. Their poems demonstrate a conscious effort to refine and renew poetic expression through the incorporation of diverse vocabulary, including religious terms, slang, and colloquialisms previously considered unsuitable for

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Literature of the Spanish Golden Age: Prose, Cervantes, and Don Quixote

Literature in the Golden Age (II): Prose in the Sixteenth Century

The Picaresque Novel

The picaresque novel is the most important contribution of sixteenth-century fiction. The first example is the picaresque novel Lazarillo de Tormes. Its main features are:

  • It is an autobiographical novel: the protagonist (the rogue) recounts his life from childhood to the situation found at the time of narration.
  • The protagonist is an antihero: his parents have no honor, are of humble origins, and are not motivated
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Literary Movements and Styles: From Neoclassicism to Avant-Garde

Neoclassicism

  1. Emphasis on simplicity and naturalness, eschewing fantasy.
  2. Focus on moral and social aspects of humanity.
  3. Adherence to rigorous rules, mimicking classic literature.
  4. Limited creativity for refined expression.
  5. Exaltation of simple pleasures.
  6. Predominance of reason over emotion.
  7. Knowledge acquisition through methodical work.

Neoclassicism emerged with the death of Louis XIV in 1715 and concluded with the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789, coinciding with the Enlightenment period.

Realism

The

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