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Towards the Digital Cultural History of the Other Silver Age Spain New edition [Kõva köide]

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This volume examines the Other Silver Age Spain (1868-1939) through a digital lens, reinterpreting literary and cultural history with the aid of new technologies that raise questions about historical memory, the canon, and the archive. It explore modern Spanish culture using digital corpora, libraries, maps, networks, and visualizations.



Consigned to oblivion by the Franco regime and traditional historiography, the Other Silver Age Spain (1868-1939) encompasses an array of cultural forms that are coming back into view today with the aid of mass digitization. This volume examines the period through a digital lens, reinterpreting literary and cultural history with the aid of twenty-first-century technologies that raise aesthetic and ethical questions about historical memory, the canon, and the archive. Scholars based in Spain, Germany, and the United States explore modern Spanish culture in the context of digital corpora, archives, libraries, maps, networks, and visualizations—tools that spark dialogues between the past and the present, research and teaching, and Hispanism in the academy and society at large.

Introduction. Silver Age Spain, Today: The View through a Digital Lens 7(28)
Dolores Romero Lopez
Jeffrey Zamostny
I Corpus, Archive, Database, Library: Digital Repositories and their Uses
Chapter 1 Replication Crisis and the (Digital) Humanities: Perspectives from the Spanish Silver Age(s)
35(32)
Jose Calvo Tello
Nanette Rifiler-Pipka
Chapter 2 From the Digital Humanities to Digital Modernism: Critical Approaches to Technology and Literary Databases: SilverAgeLab Translations and Valle-Inclan's Manuscripts
67(22)
Rosario Mascato Rey
Adriana Abalo Gomez
Chapter 3 Mnemosine: A Digital Platform for Research and Rediscovery of the Other Silver Age Spain
89(18)
Jose Miguel Gonzalez Soriano
Joaquin Gayoso Cabada
Chapter 4 Digitizing Erotica: A Virtual Wunderkammer: Sexual Cultures in Early Twentieth-Century Spain
107(16)
Maite Zubiaurre
Wendy Perla Kurtz
Chapter 5 A Distant and Close Reading Analysis of Spanish Anarchist Magazines and Erotic Magazines of the Early Twentieth Century
123(26)
Elena Bonmati Gonzalvez
II Maps and Networks: Perspectives from Hispanic, Iberian, and Transatlantic Studies
Chapter 6 Mapping Celia en la revolution by Elena Fortun
149(20)
Maria Jesus Fraga
Chapter 7 Dance Studies and Digital Humanities: On Tour with Antonia Merce La Argentina's Ballets Espagnols (1927--1929)
169(18)
Blanca Gomez Cifuentes
Chapter 8 Digital Cartography as a Tool for Studying Transnational Literary Relations: The Iberian Case
187(24)
Santiago Perez Isasi
Chapter 9 Transatlantic Transfers: Dynamics of Circulation in Literary and Cultural Magazines of the Silver Age
211(18)
Hanno Ehrlicher
Jorg Lehmann
Chapter 10 New Models for a Digital Reading of the Republican Exile of 1939
229(24)
Lucia Cotarelo Esteban
List of Tables 253(2)
List of Figures 255(4)
Notes on Contributors 259(6)
Index 265
Dolores Romero López is associate professor of Spanish literature at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. She is director of theresearch teamLa otra Edad de Plata: Historia Cultural y Digitaland coordinator of Mnemosine: Biblioteca Digital de La otra Edad de Plata.









Jeffrey Zamostny is associate professor of Spanish at the University of West Georgia. His research explores questions of gender, sexuality, celebrity, and fandom in the literature and culture of early twentieth-century Spain. He is also a literary translator.