Struggling with the ‘Rosalian myth’
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Published:2020-12-01
Issue:3
Volume:20
Page:409-435
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ISSN:1752-2331
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Container-title:Journal of Romance Studies
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Journal of Romance Studies
Author:
Pereira-Muro Carmen
Abstract
The theme of emigration is present in the work of two of the most prominent nineteenth-century Galician authors, Emilia Pardo Bazán and Rosalía de Castro. They had very different approaches: the topic of displacement in several naturalist stories by Pardo Bazán is far removed from the discourse of affect that characterizes de Castro’s work. But in the novel Morriña [‘Homesickness’] (1889), Pardo Bazán displays an uneasy mixture of both discourses (sentimentalism and naturalist determinism) which is, I will argue, a result of the unresolved tension between her Spanish nationalism and her feminist agenda. This tension will lead her to both accept and challenge the ‘Rosalian myth’ created by Galician migrants and embodied in Esclavitud, the migrant protagonist of Morriña.
Publisher
Liverpool University Press
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Language and Linguistics,Cultural Studies