The Re-Generation of '98

Author(s)Gunn, Elizabeth
Date Accessioned2016-09-26T17:38:18Z
Date Available2016-09-26T17:38:18Z
Publication Date2012-07-31
AbstractIf the so-called Generation of 1898 reacts to an industrializing, dehumanizing occidental world, it will reportedly turn inward into Spain to regenerate a nation suffering from “abulia” after the loss of the country’s last colonies and in the wake of domestic turmoil. Many of the Generation of ‘98’s traditionally accepted members employ innovative literary forms to position themselves as artists and intellectuals who shall guide Spain on its spiritual journey. While each author approaches regeneration differently, they converge in their belief of salvation by way of an individualistic, spiritual journey meant to question the current political and social state. It is a progressive journey. Among this generation’s traditionally accepted members, Miguel de Unamuno and Pío Baroja offer male protagonists on such an individual, spiritual journey; Ramón del Valle-Inclán depicts the impossible success of such a journey in his experimental esperpentos. In each instance, the authors’ work exposes a traditional stance vis-à-vis females and marriage. Additionally, they either explicitly denounce sexual otherness as counterproductive--as is the case with Baroja’s Camino de perfección--or they denounce it implicitly by perpetuating heterosexual normativity as also with Baroja’s novel, Unamuno’s Niebla and Valle-Inclán’s Luces de bohemia Carmen de Burgos offers a somewhat different perspective in her short novel, El veneno del arte. The group of authors, sharing a fin de siècle concern for Spain, experiments with form, often with nationalistic, propagandizing ends. The Generation of ’98 systematically reinforces heterosexual normativity and marriage for nationalistic purposes, thereby banishing, punishing, or disallowing promiscuity, homosexuality and incest, among others. By addressing instances of such otherness, though, the works in question already point to their own instability and reliance on difference for their own constitution. Therefore, though history is portrayed as progress, it is better understood as a process of difference.en_US
ISSN1536-1837
URLhttp://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/19711
Languageen_USen_US
PublisherLatin American Studies Program, University of Delaware, Newark, DEen_US
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
KeywordsGeneration of 1898en_US
KeywordsMiguel de Unamunoen_US
KeywordsRamón de Valle-Inclánen_US
KeywordsCarmen de Burgosen_US
KeywordsPío Barojaen_US
KeywordsQueer Theoryen_US
KeywordsHetero-normativityen_US
TitleThe Re-Generation of '98en_US
TypeArticleen_US
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