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Considerations of Cultural Identity and Demarginalization in Contemporary Spanish Novela Negra
( Chung-ying Yang )
스페인어문학 80권 157-182(26pages)
DOI 10.21811/EH.80.157
UCI I410-ECN-0102-2018-800-000327792

If we look at the historical context of Spain, Castile has held its central dominance over the peripheral territories of the Iberian Peninsula, particularly Galicia, the Basque Country, and Catalonia. It is evident that with the victory of the Catholic Monarchs of Castile against the Moorish invasion, the inhabitants of these peripheral regions were relegated to secondary, and marginal positions as the cultural others. Until the 1980s, with the end of Franco`s dictatorship, numerous writers have managed to empower marginal literary genres written in vernacular languages, and among them detective fiction, which has provided profound reflections on issues of displacement, and marginality. Crimen en Compostela (Crime in Compostela), published in 1984 and written by Carlos Gonzalez Reigosa, has been considered by the critics as the first hard-boiled crime fiction in Galicia. Although the narrative frame is centered on a mysterious murder of a wealthy property developer, our writer attempts to reconstruct Galicia`s glorious past and seek the Galicians` cultural roots and identity. Galvez en Euskadi (1983) is the second detective novel of a series by Jorge Martinez Reverte featuring Julio Galvez. Being a non-Basque, the author wants to communicate some understanding of the complex Basque situation through the publication of this work. Moreover, Martinez Reverte tries to differentiate between the Basque separatism, the nationalism and the terrorism of ETA, ideologies which have provoked discourses of violence. Brigada Central, written by Juan Madrid, is a series of detective novels featured by Manuel Flores, a gypsy detective. Framed in the final years of 80s, Flores el Gitano is the first novel of this series and narrates how Flores takes his colleagues to go all over the peripheral areas of Madrid to solve all types of crimes. The present essay aims to study the textual analysis of Crimen en Compostela by Carlos Gonzalez Reigosa, Galvez en Euskadi by Jorge Martinez Reverte, and Flores, el gitano by Juan Madrid. We will explore how these three writers subvert the formula of American hard-boiled tradition, and how they elaborate the representations of detectives as the cultural others with questions of gender, race, ideology and language in order to convey their heterogeneity, autonomy and demarginalization.

1. Introducción
2. Crimen en Compostela
3. Gálvez en Euskadi
4. Brigada Central
5. Conclusión
Bibliografía
[자료제공 : 네이버학술정보]
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