Search

Find us on Facebook

Contact

Send me quarterly Newsletter topics:
African Studies

Anthropology

Archaeology

Architecture

Art

Art Modern

Aviation

Business

Catalan

Children's Books

Classics

Collectables

Comics

Computer Studies

Cookery

Criminal Law

Design

Development

Disability

Economics

Economic History

Education

English Literature

Egyptology

Environment

Fashion

Fiction

Film

Gender Studies

Geography

Geology

Gibraltar

Hispanic Latin A.

Hispanic Spain

History

History of Dress

History of Science

Human Rights

India

Intellectual Property

Interior Design

Labour Studies

Languages

Law

LGBT

Library Science

Linguistics

Mathematics

Media

Medicine

Middle East

Military

Military History

Military Studies

Music

Natural History

Nautical

NLP

Pets

Philosophy

Photography

Poetry

Politics

Popular Culture

Popular Music

Popular Science

Portugal

Psychology

Publicity

Religious Studies

Sociology

Spain

Television

Theatre

Theatre Studies

Travel

Vehicles

World Literature

Franco’s Friends

 

Author: Peter Day
ISBN: 9781849543613
Format: PB
Extent: 272 pp.
Price: £9.99
Publication: Available
Publisher: Biteback

 

In 1936, a British plane flew to the Canaries. On board, Major Hugh Pollard was travelling in the company of two attractive young blondes. But this was no holiday and Pollard no ordinary tourist, he was a long-time MI6 agent embarking on a secret mission. Later, leaving the Canaries for Morocco, the very same plane carried another passenger: General Francisco Franco.

With a cast list that reads like a who’s who of British intelligence, Franco’s Friends tells the little-known story of how MI6 helped orchestrate the coup that brought General Franco to power. In this revelatory account, by drawing on previously classified files, Peter Day details the bribes, the plots and the moral dilemmas behind one of the most dubious acts ever carried out by the British government in the name of self-interest.

Early Visions and Representations of America

 

Author: M. Carmen Gomez-Galisteo
ISBN: 9781441103826
Format: HB
Extent: 224 pp.
Price: £65
Publication: Available
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic

 

When the Europeans first arrived in America, they had a number of preconceptions, prejudices, expectations and hopes about what life in the New World would be like. This book examines the different visions and representations of America conveyed in the writings of Spanish conquistador Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca and the Pilgrim leader William Bradford, taking both writers within their respective literary and historical contexts.

Anthologies of American literature have consistently ignored Spanish-language achievements on the grounds of a restrictive interpretation of American literature based on linguistic boundaries. Consequently, Spanish-language texts such as Cabeza de Vaca’s or the account by the Hidalgo de Elvas, to name but two examples, have been marginalized in the narrative of American literary history. In seeking to redress this neglect, Galisteo contributes to scholarship which seeks to analyze Early America as a whole, including not only Anglo American perspectives but also the Spanish American aspect of the colonization process.

Life Writing in Carmen Martín Gaite’s Cuadernos de Todo

 

Author: Maria-José Blanco López de Lerma
ISBN: 9781855662476
Format: HB
Extent: 230 pp.
Price: £50
Publication: Available
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer

 

Carmen Martín Gaite (1925-2000) was one of the most important Spanish writers of the second half of the twentieth century. From the 1940s, until her death in 2000, she published short stories, novels, poetry, drama, children literature and cultural and historical studies. This book studies life writing in Martín Gaite’s notebooks Cuadernos de todo (2002) and her novels of the 1990s, Nubosidad variable (1992), La Reina de las nieves (1994), Lo raro es vivir (1996) and Irse de casa (1998). It looks at the use of first person narration in Martín Gaite’s work, drawing a parallel between the notebooks and her fictional work. It further analyses the way the author’s notebooks relate to the development of her later novels as well as the use of writing as therapy. This work offers a way of looking at Carmen Martín Gaite’s work from a personal and intimate perspective.

The Role of the Bishop in Late Antiquity

 

Author: José Fernández Urbiña,
            Mar Marcos Sanchez & Andrew Fear
ISBN: 9781780932170
Format: HB
Extent: 256 pp.
Price: £70
Publication: Available
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic

 

Late Antiquity witnessed a major transformation in the authority and power of the Episcopate within the Church, with the result that bishops came to embody the essence of Christianity and increasingly overshadow the leading Christian laity. The rise of Episcopal power came in a period in which drastic political changes produced long and significant conflicts both within and outside the Church. This book examines these problems in depth, looking at bishops’ varied roles in both causing and resolving these disputes, including those internal to the church, those which began within the church but had major effects on wider society, and those of a secular nature.

Franco’s International Brigades

 

Author: Christopher Othen
ISBN: 9781849042475
Format: PB
Extent: 344 pp.
Price: £15.99
Publication: Available
Publisher: Hurst & Company

 

Foreign volunteers fought on behalf of General Franco and the Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War for a right-wing cause whose aim was to smash democracy. These assorted adventurers, fascists, and Catholic crusaders were on the winning side, but their role has remained strangely hidden until now. Men from Portugal and Morocco signed on for money and adventure. General Eoin O’Duffy organised 700 Irishmen in a modern Crusade; 500 Catholic Frenchmen fought in the ‘Jeanne D’Arc’ unit; and thirty British volunteers, including aristocrats and working-class fascists, also took up arms. Romanian Iron Guard extremists died at Majadahonda and an Indian volunteer fought in the fascist militia. There were Russians, Americans, Finns, Belgians, Greeks, Cubans, and many more. Goose-stepping alongside the volunteers were fascist conscripts from Germany and Italy, in training for the next world war. Foreigners, whether unknown individuals like British pilot Cecil Bebb or infamous figures like the German dictator Adolf Hitler, were essential to Franco’s victory. Without Bebb –– who flew General Francisco Franco from the Canary Islands to Spanish Morocco in 1936, a journey which was to precipitate the onset of the Spanish Civil War — the war would never have started; without Hitler, Franco would never have won.

An Architecture of Ineloquence: José Lluis Sert’s Carmel de la Paix

 

Author: J.K. Birksted
ISBN: 9780754678014
Format: HB
Extent: 197 pp.
Price: £55
Publication: Available
Publisher: Ashgate

 

Set on a hillside near Cluny, in a region associated with religious institutions and sacred architecture (including Le Corbusier’s La Tourette), Le Carmel de la Paix, designed by José Luis Sert, remains tranquilly unvisited and quietly erased from architectural history. Why? This unusual convent falls outside the standard categories of Sert’s architecture and has been overlooked in most publications about his work. As J.K. Birksted explains, the design and construction process for this building proved nightmarish, resulting in a building which, at first sight, appears to be ‘ineloquent’. This first detailed examination of this building shows how the convent and the story of its creation offer valuable and important new insights into Sert, his architecture and his life.

Portugal: Economic, Political and Social Issues

 

Author: António José Bento Goncalves
ISBN: 9781622574742
Format: HB
Extent: 214 pp.
Price: £124.99
Publication: Available
Publisher: Nova Science (Gazelle)

 

One of the oldest nations in Europe, Portugal has changed immensely over the past 40 years. The revolution of 1974, which established democracy, the decolonization, the negotiation and finally accession to the European Union and, most recently, the adoption of the Euro, have profoundly marked the past four decades and changed the entire structure of the country. This book outlines the present Portuguese economic, political and social issues of the new millennium.

Iberian Modalities

 

Editor: Juan Ramón Resina
ISBN: 9781846318337
Format: HB
Extent: 320 pp.
Price: £70
Publication: January 2013
Publisher: Liverpool University Press

Of late the term Iberian Studies has been gaining academic currency, but its semantic scope still fluctuates. For some it is a convenient way of combining the official cultures of two states, Portugal and Spain; yet for others the term opens up disciplinary space, altering established routines. A relational approach to Iberian Studies shatters the state’s epistemological frame and complexifies the field through the emergence of lines of inquiry and bodies of knowledge hitherto written off as irrelevant. This timely volume brings together contributions from leading international scholars who demonstrate the cultural and linguistic complexity of the field by reflecting on the institutional challenges to the practice of Iberian Studies. As such, the book will be required reading for all those working in the field.

Thinking Barcelona

 

Author:Edgar Illas
ISBN: 9781846318320
Format: HB
Extent: 244 pp.
Price: £70
Publication: October 2012
Publisher: Liverpool University Press

Thinking Barcelona studies the ideological work that redefined Barcelona during the 1980s and adapted the city to a new economy of tourism, culture, and services. The 1992 Olympic Games offered to the municipal government a double opportunity to establish an internal consensus and launch Barcelona as a happy combination of European cosmopolitanism and Mediterranean rootedness. The staging of this municipal “euphoric postpolitics,” which entailed an extensive process of urban renewal, connects with the similarly exultant contexts of a reviving Catalan nation, post-transitional Spain, and post-Cold War globalization. The transformation of Barcelona, in turn, contributed to define the ideologies of globalization, as the 1992 Games were among the first global mega-events that celebrated the neoliberal “end of history.” In this study, Barcelona emerges as a singular conjuncture overdetermined by global capitalism, but is also a space to reflect on three main problematics of postmodern globalization: the spectralization of the social in a fully commodified world; the contradiction between cosmopolitanism and the state; and the vanishing essence of the city.

Aztec Goddesses and Christian Madonnas

 

Authors: Joseph Kroger & Patrizia Granziera
ISBN: 9781409435983
Format: PB
Extent: 346 pp.
Price: £25
Publication: October 2012
Publisher: Ashgate

The face of the divine feminine can be found everywhere in Mexico. One of the most striking features of Mexican religious life is the prevalence of images of the Virgin Mother of God. This is partly because the divine feminine played such a prominent role in pre-Hispanic Mexican religion. Goddess images were central to the devotional life of the Aztecs, especially peasants and those living in villages outside the central city of Tenochtitlan (present day Mexico City). This book uncovers the myths and images of 22 Aztec Goddesses and 28 Christian Madonnas of Mexico. Their rich and symbolic meaning is revealed by placing them in the context of the religious worldviews in which they appear and by situating them within the devotional life of the faithful for whom they function as powerful mediators of divine grace and terror. Includes 32 colour and 116 b&w illustrations.