The Changing Spanish Family
Essays on New Views in Literature, Cinema and Theater
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About the Book
Despite centuries of Catholic conservatism, Spain stands among the Western countries that have recently embraced non-traditional families. A decline in the dominance of extended families, the upswing in single-parent households, and an increase in the number of working mothers have all transformed what it means to be a “Spanish family.” Many factors have prompted this change, including the end of Franco’s dictatorship, the liberalization of society, economic reforms, Spanish feminism, and recent Socialist constitutional reforms recognizing the rights of same-sex partners. This collection of essays examines how authors, filmmakers and playwrights are engaging with changes to Spanish culture, exploring the very redefining of Spanish society.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Tiffany Trotman
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 226
Bibliographic Info: 7 photos, notes, bibliographies, index
Copyright Date: 2011
pISBN: 978-0-7864-6404-3
eISBN: 978-0-7864-8753-0
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Introduction
TIFFANY TROTMAN 1
1. Why We Are All in the Club: El club de las malas madres
CATHERINE BOURLAND ROSS 9
2. Hypermodern Families in Ángela Vallvey’s Los estados carenciales
TIFFANY TROTMAN 24
3. All Turbulent on the Home Front: Unfulfilled Working Mothers in Almudena Grandes’ Atlas de geografía humana
LORRAINE RYAN 40
4. New Conceptions of Family in Contemporary Galician Narrative: Visions of Maternity in the Works of María Xosé Queizán and Teresa Moure
MARISOL RODRI ´GUEZ RODRI ´GUEZ 59
5. Feminism and Motherhood in the Police Novels of Alicia Giménez Bartlett
RENÉE CRAIG-ODDERS 75
6. Charting the New Nuclear Family in Pedro Almodóvar’s Los abrazos rotos
SAMUEL AMAGO 93
7. Recovering Gender: Motherhood and Female Identity in El pájaro de la felicidad and Gary Cooper que estás en los cielos
DIANA M. BARNES 109
8. Picking a Fight with Domestic Violence: New Perspectives on Patriarchy in Contemporary Spanish Cinema
PAUL BEGIN 126
9. Meet the Nihilists: The Disintegration of the Contemporary Spanish Family in Pedro Aguilera’s La influencia
AMY L. TIBBITTS 141
10. Parents on Stage in Contemporary Spanish Theater
CANDYCE LEONARD 159
11. Basque Identity on Stage: History, Family Constructs, and the Troubled Mother in Maite Agirre’s Bilbao: Lauaxeta, tiros y besos and Teresa Calo Fontán’s El día en que inventé tu nombre
TRACIE AMEND 180
12. Mother-Daughter Relationships in Contemporary Spanish Theater
CRISTINA CASADO PRESA 198
About the Contributors 215
Index 217