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Book Series

Aris & Phillips Hispanic classics

Minsik readers
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Other platforms
3.8
6 ratings
5
BOOKS
1,150
PAGES
~19h 10min
READING TIME

About Author

Antonio Buero Vallejo

Antonio Buero Vallejo (Guadalajara, 29 de septiembre de 1916-Madrid, 29 de abril de 2000) fue un dramaturgo español, asociado al movimiento Generación del 36 y considerado el dramaturgo español más importante de la Guerra Civil Española. Durante su carrera obtuvo tres Premios Nacionales de Teatro (en 1957, 1958 y 1959), un Premio Nacional de Teatro por toda su trayectoria en 1980, el Premio Nacional de Literatura en 1996 y el Premio Miguel de Cervantes, máximo galardón literario de España, en 1986. Desde 1971 hasta su muerte fue miembro de la Real Academia Española.

Description

This play describes a teaching centre for young people who are blind, where a false unity is maintained by a mixture of fear, coercion and diversion and where education is seen as to play a part in the regime's ideological apparatus and to encourage the acceptance of pleasant and reassuring myths.

How the series evolves

beginning
In the burning darkness
0.0· tough start
peak
Bodas de sangre
3.8· best book in series
finale
The physician of his honour
0.0· messes up the ending
overall
0.8· maybe series needed more care

Books in this Series

In the burning darkness

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This play describes a teaching centre for young people who are blind, where a false unity is maintained by a mixture of fear, coercion and diversion and where education is seen as to play a part in the regime's ideological apparatus and to encourage the acceptance of pleasant and reassuring myths.

Bodas de sangre

3.8 (6)
0

Lorca's Blood Wedding is a classic of twentieth-century theatre. The story is based on a newspaper fragment which told of a family vendetta and a bride who ran away with the son of the enemy family. Lorca uses it to investigate the subjects which fascinated him: desire, repression, ritual, and the constraints and commitments of the rural Spanish community in which the play is rooted. Ted Hughes's version stays close in spirit and letter to the original Spanish. With marvellous directness, he fuses Lorca's vision to his own, and the result is a powerful poetic text which captures all the violence and pathos of the play for an English-speaking audience.

Commander Mendoza

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"The story of Dan Fadrique Lopez de Mendoza, a man of seafaring adventures and a deist in the mould of the eighteenth-century philosophes, and Dona Blanca Roldan de Solis, a woman of unbounded pride and a Catholic driven by religious fanaticism, neither of which traits prevented her from having had an adulterous affair as a young woman in Lima, Peru, with Don Fadrique."--Back cover.