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The Spanish Civilization Hi st ory, Li t er at ur e and M i guel de Cer vant es
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Page 1: The spanish civilization

The Spanish Civilization

Hi st or y, Li t er at ur e and Mi guel de Cer vant es

Page 2: The spanish civilization

The History of Spain

• Prehistoric times• The Celt- Iberian Spain• Phoenicians, Greeks, and

Carthaginians• Romans and Goths• Moorish Epochs and Reconquista• The Catholic Monarchs• Habsburg and Bourbon Kings• 20th Century

Page 3: The spanish civilization

The Spanish Literature

• Spanish literature generally refers to literature (Spanish poetry, prose, and drama) written in theSpanish language within the territory that presently constitutes the state of Spain.

• Its development coincides and frequently intersects with that of other literary traditions from regions within the same territory, particularly Catalan literature, Galician literature, and more recently a formal Basque literature.

Page 4: The spanish civilization

Castiliano/Castellano

• Spanish (español) is a Romance language named for its origins as the native tongue of a large proportion of the inhabitants of Spain.

• It is also named Castilian after the Spanish region of Castile where it originated.

• Spanish is the second most natively spoken language in the world, after Mandarin Chinese.

Page 5: The spanish civilization

Catalan

• is a Romance language, the national and only official language of Andorra and a co-official language in the Spanish autonomous communities of Catalonia, the Balearic Islandsand Valencian Community, where it is known as Valencian.

Page 6: The spanish civilization

Galician

• is a language of the Western Ibero-Romance branch, spoken in Galicia, an autonomous community located in northwestern Spain, where it is co-official with Castilian, as well as in border zones of the neighboring territories of Asturias andCastile and León.

Page 7: The spanish civilization

Basque

• Is the ancestral language of the Basque people, who inhabit the Basque Country, a region spanning an area in northeastern Spain and southwestern France.

Page 8: The spanish civilization

Development of Spanish Literature

• Pre-Historic

– Actual written evidence has never been found.

– As far back as the last Paleolithic era (30,000-15,000 BCE) engaged in a variety of oral lyric traditions.

– Originally, these lyrical songs would have been closely associated with fertility rites, the hunt, or other key life stages.

Page 9: The spanish civilization

Development of Spanish Literature

• Renaissance– During the 15th century the pre-

Renaissance occurs.

– The most important characteristics of the Renaissance: • The language in this age is dominated by naturalness

and simplicity.

• The preferred themes are, fundamentally, love, nature, pagan mythology, from which the histories of gods and the female beauty are reflected, following always the same classical ideal.

Page 10: The spanish civilization

Development of Spanish Literature

• Baroque– 17th Century

– The Baroque style used exaggerated motion and clear, easily interpreted detail to produce drama, tension, exuberance, and grandeur in sculpture, painting, literature, dance, and music.

– The Baroque is characterized by the following points:• Pessimism

• Disillusionment

Page 11: The spanish civilization

Development of Spanish Literature

• Romanticism

– 19th century

– Characteristics:

• Rejection of Neoclassicism

• Subjectivism

• Attraction to Nocturnal and Mysterious

• Escape from the world that surrounds them

Page 12: The spanish civilization

Development of Spanish Literature

• Enlightenment

– 18th century

– “Arrival of Lights in Spain”

– 3 phases:

• Anti-baroquism

• Neoclassicism

• Pre-Romanticism

Page 13: The spanish civilization

Development of Spanish Literature

• Realism

– Objective vision of reality

– The narrators write their works approaching reality from their moral conception.

– Themes that are familiar to the reader

– The popular and colloquial language acquires great importance.

Page 14: The spanish civilization

Development of Spanish Literature

• Modernism

– Regenerationism

– Modernism was rooted in the idea that "traditional" forms of art, literature, religious faith, social organization, and daily life had become outdated; therefore it was essential to sweep them aside.

Page 15: The spanish civilization

Miguel de Cervantes • Born in Alcala de Henares, a town

20 miles from Madrid, on September 29, 1547

• He was named Miguel for Saint Michael

• Son of a barber-surgeon• His family was large; he was only

the fourth son out of what was to become seven children in total.

• Studied under the Jesuits as a child; Did not go to a university

Page 16: The spanish civilization

Miguel de Cervantes

• In 1570, he left Spain for Italy, a move usually done by the Spaniards of his time to further their careers.

• This move made the confrontation between the Turks and the Spanish infantries located in nearby Italy inevitable.

• His ship was captured by pirates and he was taken as a slave to Algiers, a country in northern Africa. (1575)

Page 17: The spanish civilization

Miguel de Cervantes • It is believed that his life as a

slave from 1575 to 1580 became the source of inspiration for some episodes in Don Quixote.

• Spain had changed drastically during Cervantes's absence.

• It was his return to Spain which began his career as a major literary figure.

• In 1585, he published his first long work, La Galatea, a prose pastoral romance.

Page 18: The spanish civilization

Miguel de Cervantes

• Became a dramatist.

• First Part of Don Quixote came out in 1605.

• In 1615, a year before his death, the Second Part came out and was just as successful.

• Unfortunately, all of this success resulted in no profit for Cervantes, who had sold the publishing rights of his work.

Page 19: The spanish civilization

MuchasGracias!

De: Angeline Lorraine Salazar