Beteiligte: | |
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In: | Studies in Spanish & Latin American Cinemas, 12, 2015, 3, S. 295-310 |
veröffentlicht: |
Intellect
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Medientyp: | Artikel, E-Artikel |
Umfang: | 295-310 |
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ISSN: |
2050-4837
2050-4845 |
DOI: | 10.1386/slac.12.3.295_1 |
veröffentlicht in: | Studies in Spanish & Latin American Cinemas |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Schlagwörter: | |
Kollektion: | Intellect (CrossRef) |
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>Luis Buñuel’s short documentary film, Las Hurdes: Tierra sin pan/Las Hurdes: Land without Bread (1933) has long frustrated critics, who have variously categorized it as a socialist-realist call to arms, a brutal parody of ethnography and a flirtation with sadism. Some question whether the film is a documentary at all. By examining the film in light of not only its historically immediate predecessors, but also an often-neglected one – Lope de Vega’s play, Las Batuecas del Duque de Alba/The Duke of Alba’s Las Batuecas (Lope de Vega, 1604–1614) – I will account for the facet of Las Hurdes that these disparate characterizations fail to include. To do so, this investigation engages in what Bertrand Westphal calls ‘geocriticism’, a critical practice that ‘studies the literary stratifications of referential space’. Here, the space in question is the valley of Las Batuecas/Las Hurdes, and the key strata are Lope’s play and Buñuel’s film the former text casts the region as a ‘crypt space’ for Castile, and the latter recapitulates and critiques that role in a new temporal context. By scrutinizing these textual reconfigurations of the region as part of the same broader phenomenon, I will elucidate the aesthetically and politically contentious relationship of Las Hurdes’ diegetic content to its human and geographical referents.</jats:p> |