Fisonomías de lo invisible: Raza y nación en la literatura decimonónica española (1808-1843)
During the 19th century, the idea of race was key in the development of the concept of nation. The semantic affinities and dependence that bind together both concepts have fluctuated in their form of expression but always maintaining a dual nature: both are unifying factors and both work as a princi...
Main Author: | David Félix Fernández Díaz |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | Spanish |
Published: |
Universidad de Cádiz
2019-12-01
|
Series: | Cuadernos de Ilustración y Romanticismo |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://revistas.uca.es/index.php/cir/article/view/4547 |
Similar Items
-
Thomas Carlyle and the Politics of Race in John Mitchel’s Jail Journal
by: Edward Molloy
Published: (2022-03-01) -
El tratamiento de la locura entre los siglos XIX y XX: los discursos sobre la cura en la medicina mental española, 1890-1917
by: José Javier Plumed Domingo, et al. -
Urban Revolt, Nationalist Revolutions: Puebla and Valencia, 1808-1814
by: Scott Eastman
Published: (2011-03-01) -
Shaping the National Body: Physical Education and the Transformation of German Nationalism in the Long Nineteenth Century
by: Daniel Tröhler
Published: (2017-12-01) -
Giving shape to the past: Pre-columbia in nineteenth-century Mexican literary journals
by: Adam T. Sellen