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| | MSN Encarta - Print Preview - Spanish Literature |
 | | The Generation of 1898 continued to discuss the decline of Spain in the early 1900s, and was joined by a slightly younger group of early-20th-century writers. |  | | Spanish literature after the Generation of 1898 can be divided roughly into two categories: literature that came before the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) and literature that came after. |  | | Perhaps the most inventive modern writer in the Generation of 1898 was playwright, poet, and novelist Ramón María del Valle-Inclán. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/text_761575679___27/Spanish_Literature.html
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| | Wandering Star - Astrology by Generation, E. Alan Meece |
 | | "The mellow ones," 1970-1974 (Generation X-b) (Uranus in Libra, Neptune in Sagittarius, Pluto in Virgo/Libra) This is mostly a friendly, easy-going, confused, flabby, indolent group of "slackers," but it has great potential in music and diplomacy. |  | | Many children of the seventies and eighties feel the need to fill the cultural void in their lives by exploring the unknown and traveling widely. |  | | This transitional sub-generation will be a great source of visionaries, adventurers, humorists, storytellers, writers and philosophers, but don't look for too many great political leaders. |
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http://www.wstardesigns.com/Horoscopes/generations.html
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| | Generation of 1898 -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Ruiz, who used the pen name Azorín, was the first to identify this group as the Generation of 1898 (see Spanish Literature). |  | | in Spain, the novelists, poets, essayists, and thinkers active at the time of the Spanish-American War (1898), who reinvigorated Spanish letters and restored Spain to a position of intellectual and literary prominence that it had not held for centuries. |  | | Spanish essayist and novelist Ángel Ganivet was considered a precursor of the Spanish writers known as the Generation of 1898 because of his concern for the spiritual regeneration of his country. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9055876?tocId=9055876
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| | SPA Spanish Courses |
 | | Principal figures and works of Spanish dramatic literature from the Generation of 1898 to the present. |  | | A critical approach to and analysis of literary types, including poetry, drama, short story, and novel. |  | | Survey of major works, figures, and movements from 1880 to the present. |
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http://www.asu.edu/aad/catalogs/fall_1999/spa.html
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| | SPI Courses |
 | | Studies in intellectual thought, literary work and special contributions of the writers of the generation of 1898. |  | | SPI 636 SPANISH POETRY FROM THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY THROUGH THE GENERATION OF 1898. |  | | A study of the works of the Generation of 1898 and representative works of recent writers. |
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http://www.uky.edu/Registrar/bull0001/courses/spi.html
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| | Graduate Studies Western Illinois University |
 | | (3) Study of major works of prose, poetry, and drama from the Generation of 1898 to the present, with emphasis on the novel. |
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http://www.wiu.edu/grad/0203catalog/credit-fll.shtml
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| | gufa257.txt |
 | | For decades thereafter she designed home patterns, toys, and art, and her works are represented in many permanent collections, including the Pennell Fund, the Library of Congress, the Carnegie Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Georgetown University Fine Prints Collection, and the Nelson-Atkins Museum in Kansas City. |  | | This portion of Miller's diary was labeled "60B" in pencil. |  | | This letter seems to date to 1864, not 1863, though it was labeled "61" in pencil. |
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http://gulib.lausun.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/gufa257.txt
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| | FULTON COUNTY INDIANA |
 | | He was married Dec. 21, 1898, to Stella FRY, whose death occurred in August, 1927. |  | | Smith is survived by her husband; her parents; three sisters, Lucille of Chicago, Rosemary and Marie [SCHALL] both at home and many other relatives and friends. |  | | Sorrow entered the home of this young couple on September 21, 1947 when their baby daughter, Gale Lynn [SMITH], passed away after living just four hours. |
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http://www.fulco.lib.in.us/Tombaugh/Obituaries/Html/1949.htm
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| | Course Profile |
 | | The focus is on selected works of the Spanish writers traditionally known as the Generation of 1898 and the intellectual and sociopolitical climate in Spain which influenced their artistic production. |  | | Selected readings from works by the Generation of 1898. |  | | This course is intended to introduce students to the representative works in prose fiction and poetry that have shaped modern Spanish literature. |
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http://www.uoguelph.ca/regweb/course_profiles/c88-302.htm
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| | A SPANISH |
 | | The exhibition included many first and early editions by these and other influential writers of the Generation of 1898. |  | | These writers became known as the Generation of 1898, and included Azorín, Antonio Machado, Miguel de Unamuno, Ramón María del Valle-Inclán, and Pío Baroja. |  | | To explore the momentous effects of the War of 1898 on the countries involved, UWMs Department of Spanish and Portuguese organized the international conference "The 1898 Spanish-American War and 20th-Century Hispanic and American Cultures," September 17-19, 1998. |
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http://www.uwm.edu/Library/special/exhibits/s&awar/s&awar.htm
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| | Peace Bibliography I-Q |
 | | Miller, J.D., Norman Angell and The Futility of War: Peace and the Public Mind, St Martin's Press, NYC, 1986. |  | | Miller, William D., A Harsh and Dreadful Love: Dorothy Day and The Catholic Worker Movement, Liveright Pres, NYC, 1973. |  | | Liddington, Jill, The Road to Greenham Common: Feminism and Anti-Militarism in Britain Since 1820, Syracuse Univ. Press, Syracuse, NY, 1991. |
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http://www.centeronconscience.org/biblio_I-Q.htm
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| | Untitled Document |
 | | Generation of 1898 -- each student will select an author and give an oral (and written) presentation on that author. |  | | This part will be presented by the professor and will include the presentation of the classical art system from which Picasso himself drew (El Greco, Velásquez and Goya). |  | | Project 1 written work to be handed in within a week of finishing the presentation. |
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http://www.stthomasu.ca/~rgmoore/courses/20CLit4043.htm
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| | UCLA Department of Spanish and Portuguese |
 | | 234: Spanish Drama and Poetry from 1898 to the Civil War. |  | | 232: Spanish Prose Literature from 1898 to the Civil War. |  | | Readings of and lectures on literary works, principally novels, from 1850 to 1898. |
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http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/spanport/programs/grad_course_span.html
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| | Powell's Books - Short Stories by the Generation of 1898/Cuentos de La Generacion de 1898: A Dual-Language Book by Miguel Unamuno |
 | | In 1898, the year of the Spanish-American War, the generation of Spanish artists known as the 98ers renounced politics and sought their country's true spirit within its landscape, its older cultural achievements, and in the character of its natives. |  | | Short Stories by the Generation of 1898/Cuentos de La Generacion de 1898: A Dual-Language Book |  | | In this dual-language book, 13 short stories constitute a tribute to five forward-looking authors from the group known as the Generation of 1898. |
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http://www.powells.com/biblio?isbn=0486436829
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| | Federico García Lorca Biography / Biography of Federico García Lorca Biography Biography |
 | | Lorca's generation, which followed Unamuno's famous Generation of 1898, dominated Spanish letters during the decade prior to the Spanish Civil War. |  | | Federico García Lorca was born in Fuentevaqueros, a village near Granada, on June 5, 1898. |  | | In the 20th century Federico García Lorca, Miguel de Unamuno, and José Ortega y Gassett are perhaps the Spaniards most widely known in international circles, Lorca for his poetry and the dramatic circumstances of his death, the other two for their philosophical and political ideas. |
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http://www.bookrags.com/biography-federico-garcia-lorca
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| | Foreign Languages and Literature - St. Cloud State University |
 | | SPA 435 Generation of 1898: A Postmodern Perspective on the Centennial |  | | Syllabus description: In order to understand and appraise the changes that have occurred in contemporary Spain after the disruptions of the Civil War, francoism, and the political transition are finally over, we need an accurate re-interpretation of the last turn-of-the-century (1898-1936). |  | | Our readings and class discussions will evolve around the writings of three members of the generation of 1898: Miguel de Unamuno, Antonio Machado, and Ramón del Valle Inclán. |
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http://www.stcloudstate.edu/forl/boyer.asp
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| | Augustus John |
 | | Considered to be the most talented artist of his generation, in 1898 John won the Slade Prize with |  | | His painting became more adventurous and his friend, Wyndham Lewis remarked that John had become a "great man of action into whose hands the fairies had placed a paintbrush instead of a sword". |  | | He developed a nomadic lifestyle and for a while he lived in a caravan and camped with gypsies. |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/ARTjohn.htm
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| | Colonial Massachusetts Millers of the Nolan-Miller Family History |
 | | * "Genealogical Guide to the Early Settlers of America," published in 1898. |  | | Jacquelyn Ann "Jackie" Girard was born Feb. 28, 1942, in Aberdeen, Wash., to Merle LeRoy Girard and Vivian Adelaide Smith. |  | | * Ebenezer Miller, born Feb. 20, 1724, whose life is covered elsewhere on this page. |
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http://home.att.net/~lewis_nolan/MILLERS.HTML
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| | The Miller Family; Other Miller Trees |
 | | Gussie immigrated to NYC in the 1890s; she married Jacob Thaler (previously spelled Tahler) on 5 December 1903 in NYC. |  | | Moishe had brothers, Sam, Jack(who settled in Leeds, Eng and changed his name to Jack Stratton.) We recently found is decendants. |  | | However, His first family was presumed dead, and he remarried again in russia. |
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http://www.ics.uci.edu/~dan/genealogy/Miller/othrmilr.htm
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| | Ganivet, Unamuno and Revindicating a '98 Precursor |
 | | Shaw notes that the first references to Ganivet as precursor of the Generation of '98 come "del esfuerzo de algunos amigos para publicar su obra después de 1897, y del hecho de que la mayoría de su obra apareciera en un corto período entre 1896 y 1898" (La Generación del '98 71-72). |  | | España filosófica contemporánea and the Interpretation of the Generation of 1898." Hispanic Review. |  | | one of the first recognized works of the Generation that systematically and philosophically proposed solutions for the social and ideological crises of "fin de siglo" Spain. |
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http://alpha1.fmarion.edu/~scmlr/03/unamuno.htm
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| | SUNY Press :: Quixotism |
 | | Quixotism explores how a group of Spanish intellectuals, writing during the time of Restoration Spain (18761931), incorporated the figure of Don Quixote into an on-going debate on Spanish national and imperial decadence and used this figure to promote a nationalistic and jingoistic formula for national-imperial regeneration. |  | | Britt Arredondo proposes a new critical category, Quixotism, as a way of identifying a particular cultural response to the national identity crisis following the loss of the final remnants of Spain's overseas empire." Susan Kirkpatrick, author of Las Románticas: Women Writers and Subjectivity in Spain, 18351850 |  | | Commonly known as the Generation of '98, these writers turned Spain's military defeat at the hands of an emerging American empire into a moral victory. |
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http://www.sunypress.edu/details.asp?id=61022
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| | The Generation of 1898. |
 | | In the domain of painting, Ignacio Zuloaga, depicted, with his robust sketches and his typically Spanish types, a world closely linked to the literature of the Generation of '98. |  | | Some members of this Generation attained truly universal standing, as is the case of the Basque Miguel de Unamuno, who, in his 'Sentimiento tragico de la vida', anticipates the reflections and the basic themes of existencialism. |  | | The Generation of '98 was almost obsessively preoccupied with what came to be known as the 'Spanish problem', and thus rediscovered the beauty of the somber Castilian countryside and developed a considerable stylistic renovation avoinding the characteristic 19th century rhetoric. |
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http://www.sispain.org/english/language/1898.html
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| | Index |
 | | Generation of 1927: In contrast to the Generation of 1898, most of the writers associated with the Generation of 1927 were poets. |  | | Generation of 1898: A collection of authors, who were primarily novelists, united by a common desire to revitalize Spain to her former glory through spiritual and ideological regeneration of the individual. |  | | The writers commonly included within the Generation of 1927 are Aleixandre, Alonso, Cernuda, Guillén, Lorca, Prados and Salinas. |
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http://users.adelphia.net/~fvila/Spain
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| | NEW CARLISLE |
 | | Tippy managed the mill and did the head sawing himself, except when there was a night shift, Mr. |  | | Casaday later invented the South Bend chilled plow that made him a multimillionaire. |  | | This stood at the foot of the hill behind the George Sharp property. |
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http://www.ncpl.lib.in.us/history/townhistory.html
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| | spanish |
 | | The Spanish novel and short story from the Romantic period to the Generation of 1898. |  | | Spanish Drama from the Romantic period to the Generation of 1898. |  | | Spanish drama from the Generation of 1898 to the present. |
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http://www.msstate.edu/dept/fl/undergraduate/spanish.html
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| | Maney Publishing - Contents/Abstracts - Hispanic Research Journal (Volume 5, Part 1, 2004) |
 | | Through her observations, she charts itineraries toward national revitalization; however, she also shares in other, more essentializing, discourses on race, ethnicity and national identity that indeed sustain the modernizing projects of her generation. |  | | Pardo Bazan locates transformations in travel and tourism, science and technology, economic and political practices, and gender arrangements often associated with modernity. |
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http://www.maney.co.uk/contents/hrj/5-1
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| | Part IV |
 | | Part IV The traumatic impact in Spain of the military defeat of 1898 started a chain reaction of public criticism and intellectual introspection that had a major influence on Spains evolution throughout the twentieth century. |  | | However, among the general public and especially the organized working class and in regionalist quarters, the resentment and dissent fomented by the events of 1898 increased. |  | | The events of 1898 had thrown Spaniards' nineteenth-century identity and self-confidence out of balance, and the countrys democratic aspirations had been seriously damaged. |
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http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/epo/spanexhib/page_7.html
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| | Roscoe Cemetery, Nolan County by Gloria B. Mayfield- Cemeteries of Texas |
 | | Frank Turner was the.son of W..J. Turner who purchased the six acres from Frank Squires to bury Joe Cleckler his wife's baby brother, who had came west from Georgia to heal from TB. |  | | Next, interments: Infants Frank E. Spires, 1892; Ethel Lena Turner, 1894. |  | | Attending the dedication of the historical marker was, from left, Frank O. Turner and Pet Cleckler. |
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http://www.cemeteries-of-tx.com/Wtx/Nolan/Roscoe.html
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| | rlsp202 |
 | | RLSP 202 The Generation of 1898 (Not offered 2003-2004) (W) |  | | A study of the poetry, essays, and novels of major authors of the "generacion del 98" in light of the intellectual and historical context of the period. |  | | Preference given to Spanish majors and students with a background in literature. |
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http://www.williams.edu:803/Registrar/catalog/depts0304/rlsp/rlsp202.html
(3438 words)
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| | Miami University: Spanish and Portuguese: |
 | | Study of the major works of poetry, fiction, essay, and theatre from Romanticism through the Generation of 1898. |  | | Study of Peninsular literature, post-Generation of '98 to present. |  | | Spain: 19th and Early 20th Century Literature and Thought (3) |
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http://www.units.muohio.edu/spanport/span/span-grad-courselis.php
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