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RMST 202 Literatures and Cultures of the Romance World II: Modern to Post-Modern
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war

Silence, Sadness, Perpetual Solitude

A lively swing of events rolls into place at the beginning of the novel, full of musical brilliance, unknown voices, and objects scattered across empty spaces. This is a book of wavering stars. And in this midst of it all there is a shadow of contempla…

Posted in Blogs, Rodoreda | Tagged with childhood, death, family, Home, life, literature, love, memories, poverty, reality, reflection, relationships, The Time of The Doves, war

Laforet on Narrative, Memory, and Trauma

Laforet on Narrative, Memory, and Trauma

Carmen Laforet, Nada

Posted in Laforet lecture, Lecture Videos | Tagged with C20th, memory, narrative, Spain, stories, story, trauma, war

Nada Nada Nada

Reading Nada honestly felt kind of heavy, but in a way that stuck with me. It follows Andrea, a young woman who moves to Barcelona after the Spanish Civil War to start university. She shows up excited and hopeful, imagining this new chapter of her life, and then almost immediately that optimism gets crushed. The […]

Posted in Blogs, Laforet | Tagged with Barcelona, Carmen laforet, nada, Spain, war

This House Has Mold, Memories, and Malice

Reading Nada felt less like reading a novel and more like being dropped into someone else’s extremely tense family group chat, except it’s set in postwar Barcelona and everyone is emotionally unwell in a deeply artistic way. What got me wasn’t the plot (which I’ll spare you), but the feeling of the book: that constant […]

Posted in Blogs, Laforet | Tagged with nada, war

A book about nothing (that somehow meant a lot)

When I first finished Nada, my immediate reaction was kind of anticlimactic. After a full year of Andrea’s life in Barcelona, she leaves feeling like she’s taken nothing away from the experience. She didn’t have a crazy transformation, didn’t really take away a clear lesson, and the story ended with no dramatic resolution. Just… nada. […]

Posted in Blogs, Laforet | Tagged with death, memory, war

Friendship in The Book of Chameleons

The Book of Chameleons by Jose Eduardo Agualusa is a tale that intertwines reality with fiction, and the past with the present. The title of the novel is quite deceiving, as it barely mentions chameleons, but the closest we get is a gecko narrator living in Angola. The novel is a profound exploration of memory, […]

Posted in Blogs | Tagged with Dreams, friendship, gecko, The Book of Chameleons, war

The Book of Chameleons- Truth, Identity and the Impacts of History

Hi everyone! This week I read “The Book of Chameleons” by José Eduardo Agualusa.  I am going to be very honest and say that I did not enjoy this book, mainly because I found it difficult to follow and mildly uninteresting. However, this book discusses important themes of identity, truth and historical impact. It also […]

Posted in Blogs | Tagged with Colonialism, family, history, life, memory, The Book of Chameleons, war

Jennifer’s Cercas slides

Jennifer’s Cercas slides

Jennifer’s slides on Soldiers of Salamis

Posted in Cercas resources | Tagged with heroes, history, memory, secrets, Spain, war

Patricio’s Cercas slides

Patricio’s Cercas slides

Patricio’s slides on Soldiers of Salamis

Posted in Cercas resources | Tagged with Fact, fiction, secrets, Spain, truth, war

let me hide behind the small details

The Trenchcoat by Norman Manea was a book which had importance and meaning, hidden by the disguise of normalcy. At first read, the book depicts the drama and relationships of many characters, and displays their conversations over dinner parties, and in the privacy of their homes. It is only in the small details where one […]

Posted in Blogs, Manea | Tagged with censorship, class, communism, history, life, politics, revolution, Symbolism, war

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