Ellas Se Fugan Del Museo: La Narrativa Femenina Frente a La Imagen De La Mujer en Publicaciones Ilustradas Espanolas Del Fin De Siglo
Cerezo, Alicia
This item is only available for download by members of the University of Illinois community. Students, faculty, and staff at the U of I may log in with your NetID and password to view the item. If you are trying to access an Illinois-restricted dissertation or thesis, you can request a copy through your library's Inter-Library Loan office or purchase a copy directly from ProQuest.
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/2142/86162
Description
Title
Ellas Se Fugan Del Museo: La Narrativa Femenina Frente a La Imagen De La Mujer en Publicaciones Ilustradas Espanolas Del Fin De Siglo
Author(s)
Cerezo, Alicia
Issue Date
2008
Doctoral Committee Chair(s)
Tolliver, Joyce L.
Department of Study
Spanish
Discipline
Spanish
Degree Granting Institution
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Degree Name
Ph.D.
Degree Level
Dissertation
Keyword(s)
Women's Studies
Language
eng
Abstract
"This is a study of the contradictory relations in turn-of-the-century Spain between the visual images of women produced by men in illustrated periodicals and textual representations of them in feminine narratives. I examine three kinds of word and image interaction: First, their fusion in ""costumbrista"" sketches (Las mujeres espanolas, americanas y lusitanas pintadas por si mismas); second, their coexistence in popular collections of novellas (El Cuento Semanal, La Novela Corta), in particular those by authors such as Carmen de Burgos and Angela Barco; and third, the more indirect connection between the images in mass-produced magazines (Blanco y Negro) and the textual response to them found in novels by Emilia Pardo Bazan and Concha Espina. This interdisciplinary examination reveals that the visual ""eternal feminine"" reinforced women's paradoxical status as either eroticized objects of desire or asexual mothers and wives; but also that certain female writers managed to escape these universal categories, demanding hybrid positions between their role in the private sphere and their status in intellectual and social arenas. The de-classification of women achieved by female writers forces us to critically reconsider the accepted categorizations of these writers as conservative or frivolous, as well as the canonical hierarchy of the literary genres transformed by their collaboration. Ultimately, the texts I study not only destabilize our assumptions about so-called high and low culture in turn-of-the-century Spain, but also serve as striking reminders that, far from being true copies of a stable reality, representations of women always encode the point of view and the gender of the producer."
Use this login method if you
don't
have an
@illinois.edu
email address.
(Oops, I do have one)
IDEALS migrated to a new platform on June 23, 2022. If you created
your account prior to this date, you will have to reset your password
using the forgot-password link below.