TY - BOOK AU - Aldana Reyes,Xavier ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Spanish Gothic: National Identity, Collaboration and Cultural Adaptation T2 - Palgrave Gothic SN - 9781137306012 AV - PN1993-1999 U1 - 791.4301 23 PY - 2017/// CY - London PB - Palgrave Macmillan UK, Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan KW - Motion pictures KW - Ethnology—Europe KW - Motion pictures—History KW - Literature—History and criticism KW - Motion pictures—European influences KW - European literature KW - Film Theory KW - European Culture KW - Film History KW - Literary History KW - European Cinema and TV KW - European Literature N1 - 1. INTRODUCTION: DEFINING AND DELIMITING THE SPANISH GOTHIC -- 2. PART I - FIRST WAVE GOTHIC (1785–1834) - Chapter 1. Imported Terrors and First Genre Hybrids -- 3. Chapter 2. The Early Spanish Gothic Novel (1800–34) -- 4. PART II - FROM ROMANTICISM TO THE FIN-DE-SIÈCLE (1834–1900) - Chapter 3. Spanish Romanticism and the Gothic -- 5. Chapter 4. From the 1860s to the Fin-de-Siècle: The Development of the Gothic Short Story -- 6. PART III - MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY GOTHIC LITERATURE (1900–2016) - Chapter 5. The Twentieth Century (1900–75): Modernist Spiritualism and Political Gothic -- 7. Chapter 6. From the Death of Franco to the Present: The Establishment of Horror and the Gothic Auteur -- 8. PART IV - SPANISH GOTHIC CINEMA (1906–2016) - Chapter 7. From Segundo de Chomón to the Rise and Fall of ‘Fantaterror’ -- 9. Chapter 8. The Post-Millennial Horror Revival: Auteurs, Gothic (Dis)Continuities and National History -- 10. Conclusion: A Language of Collaboration and Liberation. ; Available to subscribing member institutions only. Доступно лише організаціям членам підписки N2 - This book presents the first English introduction to the broad history of the Gothic mode in Spain. It focuses on key literary periods, such as Romanticism, the fin-de-siècle, spiritualist writings of the early-twentieth century, and the cinematic and literary booms of the 1970s and 2000s. With illustrative case studies, Aldana Reyes demonstrates how the Gothic mode has been a permanent yet ever-shifting fixture of the literary and cinematic landscape of Spain since the late-eighteenth century. He proposes that writers and filmmakers alike welcomed the Gothic as a liberating and transgressive artistic language UR - https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-30601-2 ER -