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  1. The most representative authors were Juan Donoso Cortés (1809–1853) and Jaime Balmes Urpía (1810–1848): Juan Donoso Cortés came from the liberal school, though later he defended Catholic and authoritarian ideas.

  2. Spanish literature, the body of literary works produced in Spain. Such works fall into three major language divisions: Castilian, Catalan, and Galician. This article provides a brief historical account of each of these three literatures and examines the emergence of major genres.

  3. Jun 20, 2024 · This has tendered an interest in the study of Mexico, one separate from the continental Latin American perspective, as new scholarship has emphasized many specific traits and cultural processes that distinguish Mexico from the rest of the Spanish-speaking world.

  4. Jun 26, 2007 · A history of Spanish literature. by. Fitzmaurice-Kelly, James, 1858-1923. Publication date. 1898. Topics. Spanish literature -- History and criticism. Publisher. New York : D. Appleton and Company.

  5. spanish literature and language. Spanish thought in the early modern period was greatly influenced by Renaissance humanism, the Counter-Reformation, the growth of the Spanish empire, and the institutionalized persecution of Jews and their descendants.

  6. Nov 19, 2010 · The impact of the Spanish conquest and independence on subsequent generations of various peoples to 2010 is also examined. This article examines the various concepts of revolution, social change, and evolution in tracing the political history of two Mexican “birthdays”: 1810 and 1910.

  7. Mar 28, 2008 · The fundamental change that allowed for the possibility of a Spanish American literature was the gradual abandonment of the formalist abstraction of Neoclassicism, and the adoption of a psychological, empirical, and contingent concept of artistic creation.

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