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The Language of Two Shores

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 October 2020

Lori Ween
Affiliation:
Pennsylvania State University, University Park
Oscar Fernández
Affiliation:
Pennsylvania State University, University Park

Extract

Nuria Amat's view of literature between borders places her in the arduous trajectory of Spanish women writers, who have written their works from the periphery of Spanish fiction. Historically, few women have been among the canonical writers of Spain, and those who wrote were known for their ambivalent representations of their role as authors. Marginal writers of both sexes were forced to engage in literary disguises and subterfuges, “common and necessary practices for those who deviated from orthodoxy and convention” (Levine and Marson xxi). With the death of Franco in 1975, women writers of Spain such as Ana María Moix (b. 1947, Catalonia), Esther Tusquets (b. 1946, Catalonia), Marina Mayoral (b. 1942, Galicia), Lourdes Ortiz (b. 1943), Montserrat Roig (b. 1946, Catalonia), Cristina Fernández Cubas (b. 1945, Barcelona), and Rosa Montero (b. 1951, Madrid) began to explore their personal and national histories as the censorship ended. There soon followed a boom of female writers, who, “encouraged by the feminist movement and by all the changing atmosphere of the seventies, were able to find marketing success that soon made them visible” (Nichols 11).

Type
Criticism in Translation
Copyright
Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 2001

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References

Works Cited

Nuria, Amat. “Entrevista con Nuria Amat.” With Ana Alcaína. Barcelona Review 12 (1999): 1-9. 7 July 1999 <http://www.barcelonareview.com/12/s_na_int.htm>.Google Scholar
Nuria, Amat. La intimidad. Madrid: Alfaguara, 1997.Google Scholar
Levine, Linda Gould, and Marson, Ellen Engelson. “View from a Tightrope: Six Centuries of Spanish Women Writers.” Introduction. Spanish Women Writers: A Biobibliographical Source Book. Ed. Levine, Marson, and Waldman, Gloria Feiman. Westport: Greenwood, 1993. xv-xxxi.Google Scholar
Geraldine, Nichols. Escribir, espacio propio: Laforet, Matute, Moix, Tusquets, Riera y Roig por si mismas. Minneapolis: Inst. for the Study of Ideologies and Lit., 1989.Google Scholar
Susanna, Regazzoni. “Escritoras españolas hoy. Rosa Montero y Nuria Amat.” La novela española actual: Autores y tendencias. Ed. Alfonso, De Toro and Ingenschay, Dieter. Kassel: Reichenberger, 1995. 253–70.Google Scholar