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Nature as Enemy of Man in Julio Llamazares's Luna de lobos

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Nature as Enemy of Man in Julio Llamazares's Luna de lobos. / O'Donoghue, Samuel.
In: Forum for Modern Language Studies, Vol. 50, No. 3, 01.07.2014, p. 356-370.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

O'Donoghue, S 2014, 'Nature as Enemy of Man in Julio Llamazares's Luna de lobos', Forum for Modern Language Studies, vol. 50, no. 3, pp. 356-370. https://doi.org/10.1093/fmls/cqu023

APA

Vancouver

O'Donoghue S. Nature as Enemy of Man in Julio Llamazares's Luna de lobos. Forum for Modern Language Studies. 2014 Jul 1;50(3):356-370. doi: 10.1093/fmls/cqu023

Author

O'Donoghue, Samuel. / Nature as Enemy of Man in Julio Llamazares's Luna de lobos. In: Forum for Modern Language Studies. 2014 ; Vol. 50, No. 3. pp. 356-370.

Bibtex

@article{3fc674fe244a495e8ba7fc095b55e55e,
title = "Nature as Enemy of Man in Julio Llamazares's Luna de lobos",
abstract = "To synopsize Luna de lobos as a fictionalized account of the struggle between Republican guerrillas and the Civil Guard in the immediate aftermath of the Spanish Civil War is clearly misleading. A close reading of the work reveals an additional protagonist in this guerrilla battle set in the mountains of northern Spain: the natural world. This article provides a close analysis of Llamazares's presentation of nature in order to support the assertion that the novel transcends the specificity of Spain's history to provide a broader existential study of man's place in the universe, in particular his relationship with the natural world. In Luna de lobos, nature is a hostile force that brutalizes the protagonists. This presentation of the natural world conforms to Llamazares's aesthetic concerns as a Romantic. For Llamazares, the relationship between man and nature has become irremediably fractured.",
author = "Samuel O'Donoghue",
year = "2014",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1093/fmls/cqu023",
language = "English",
volume = "50",
pages = "356--370",
journal = "Forum for Modern Language Studies",
issn = "0015-8518",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Nature as Enemy of Man in Julio Llamazares's Luna de lobos

AU - O'Donoghue, Samuel

PY - 2014/7/1

Y1 - 2014/7/1

N2 - To synopsize Luna de lobos as a fictionalized account of the struggle between Republican guerrillas and the Civil Guard in the immediate aftermath of the Spanish Civil War is clearly misleading. A close reading of the work reveals an additional protagonist in this guerrilla battle set in the mountains of northern Spain: the natural world. This article provides a close analysis of Llamazares's presentation of nature in order to support the assertion that the novel transcends the specificity of Spain's history to provide a broader existential study of man's place in the universe, in particular his relationship with the natural world. In Luna de lobos, nature is a hostile force that brutalizes the protagonists. This presentation of the natural world conforms to Llamazares's aesthetic concerns as a Romantic. For Llamazares, the relationship between man and nature has become irremediably fractured.

AB - To synopsize Luna de lobos as a fictionalized account of the struggle between Republican guerrillas and the Civil Guard in the immediate aftermath of the Spanish Civil War is clearly misleading. A close reading of the work reveals an additional protagonist in this guerrilla battle set in the mountains of northern Spain: the natural world. This article provides a close analysis of Llamazares's presentation of nature in order to support the assertion that the novel transcends the specificity of Spain's history to provide a broader existential study of man's place in the universe, in particular his relationship with the natural world. In Luna de lobos, nature is a hostile force that brutalizes the protagonists. This presentation of the natural world conforms to Llamazares's aesthetic concerns as a Romantic. For Llamazares, the relationship between man and nature has become irremediably fractured.

U2 - 10.1093/fmls/cqu023

DO - 10.1093/fmls/cqu023

M3 - Journal article

VL - 50

SP - 356

EP - 370

JO - Forum for Modern Language Studies

JF - Forum for Modern Language Studies

SN - 0015-8518

IS - 3

ER -