This collection includes both ASU Theses and Dissertations, submitted by graduate students, and the Barrett, Honors College theses submitted by undergraduate students. 

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ABSTRACT Research into the state of literature in the beginning years of the 20th century in Spain shows an absence of women’s voices. A logical conclusion, that women had no interest in written expression during the years of 1900-1936 in Spain, has shown itself to be completely false.

ABSTRACT Research into the state of literature in the beginning years of the 20th century in Spain shows an absence of women’s voices. A logical conclusion, that women had no interest in written expression during the years of 1900-1936 in Spain, has shown itself to be completely false. Suffering under the pressure of unfair civil laws, the power of the patriarchy and the influence of the Church (“the angel of the house”), women were living in a world of silence. The lack of writings by women erases women from the historical memory in Spain and creates a literary emptiness. After researching in the shops of antique dealers and second-hand book shops of Spain, a large variety of kiosk literature written by women is revealed, exposing a substantial quantity of short novels intended for a women’s audience. Applying various literary theories such as feminism, queer theory, Marxism and deconstructionism, the literary value of these novels emerges and is worthy of being studied and included in the literary canon of Spain. In order to demonstrate the intrinsic cultural and literary value, an analysis of 9 novels written by 6 women whose literary talents had not as yet been recognized, was undertaken. The six women authors-heroins for their revolutionary literary expression- are: Magda Dontao (La carabina, Las otras dos), Sara Insúa (Salomé de hoy, La llama de Bengala ), Regina Opisso (Mi honor…!qué importa!), Angela Graupera (En las garras del hombre, Como las abejas) and Federica Montseny (Vampiresa). These novels, sold in kiosks across Spain, serve as the literary voices of women at that time that expressed the repressive condition of Spanish women, and which need to be included in the literary landscape of Spain. ABSTRACTO Examinar la literatura de los albores del siglo XX en España pone de manifiesto una ausencia de voces femeninas. Una conclusión lógica de esta ausencia, de que las mujeres no tenían ningún interés en la expresión escrita entre los años 1900 y 1936 en España, se demuestra a lo largo de esta disertación completamente equivocada. Presionadas por códigos civiles injustos, el poder del patriarcado y las influencias de la Iglesia (“el ángel del hogar”), las mujeres parecían vivir en un mundo de silencio. La falsa escasez de textos escritos por mujeres las borra del mundo literario. Sin embargo, después de algunas búsquedas en los almacenes de los anticuarios y librerías de segunda mano en España, una gran variedad de literatura de quiosco—un modo novedoso de difusión literaria que rompe con las normas tradicionales de circulación de textos—en forma de novelas cortas escritas por mujeres para lectoras principalmente femeninas, se hace accesible para el investigador. Al analizar estas obras a la luz de varias teorías críticas contemporáneas como el feminismo, la teoría queer, el marxismo y la deconstrucción, se pone de manifiesto el valor de dichos textos durante el periodo estudiado. Es decir, la ausencia de autoras se debe a un fallo del canon, basado en la ideología patriarcal, y no a la ausencia de autoras y obras con un intrínseco valor literario, social y didáctico. En esta disertación se analizan 9 novelas escritas por 6 mujeres de este período—heroínas por su expresión literaria revolucionaria— son: Magda Dontao (La carabina, Las otras dos), Sara Insúa (Salomé de hoy, La llama de Bengala), Regina Opisso (Mi honor…!qué importa!), Ángela Graupera (En las garras del hombre, Como las abejas) y Federica Montseny (Vampiresa). Estas novelas, vendidas en los quioscos de España durante las primeras décadas de siglo XX, sirvieron como ejemplos literarios de las voces de las mujeres que existieron en aquellos años que expresaron la condición represiva de las mujeres españolas y que merecieron ser incluidas en el panorama literario español.
ContributorsMartino Jr, Albert Thomas (Author) / Urioste-Azcorra, Carmen (Thesis advisor) / Tompkins, Cynthia M (Committee member) / Garcia-Fernandez, Carlos J (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Although photography has played a pivotal role in how people see themselves and how they see “others,” scholars have written very little on the (self)representation of Afro-Latin Americans in the nineteenth and early twentieth-century photography. This study argues that photographic portraits produced during this period contributed to creating negative stereotypes

Although photography has played a pivotal role in how people see themselves and how they see “others,” scholars have written very little on the (self)representation of Afro-Latin Americans in the nineteenth and early twentieth-century photography. This study argues that photographic portraits produced during this period contributed to creating negative stereotypes about Afro-Latin Americans and legitimizing Black subalternization. However, it also contends that photography served as a means of Afro Latin American self-representation. This dissertation begins by contextualizing the subjugation and exclusion of African cultures that started with the colonization of the Americas. It uses the findings of the Subaltern Studies as a methodological tool in revisiting the past; and offers a theoretical conceptualization of the photographic practice, pointing out its limits and possibilities. Subsequently, it analyzes the corpus, which consists of photographs produced in Brazil, Colombia, Cuba, and Puerto Rico. These are examined taking into account their context of production and reception. As a result, this research indicated that mainly two types of photographs of Black people were produced in Latin America during this period: photographs taken for commercial purposes, which highlighted the “exoticism” and “otherness” of Afro-Latin Americans; and anthropometric portraits used by scientists to “prove” the biological and cultural inferiority of Black people. However, the analysis also showed that Afro-Latin Americans appropriated the medium to express their subjectivity. These photographs should be seen as counter-images that subverted the photographic practice in vogue. They open new ways of thinking about Black representation throughout history.

ContributorsFillies Testa Muñoz, Juliana (Author) / Johnson, Christopher CJ (Thesis advisor) / Tompkins, Cynthia CT (Committee member) / Bezerra, Ligia LB (Committee member) / Garcia-Fernandes, Carlos CGF (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022