Romanticismo y Realismo/Naturalismo en acción: cómo leer y analizar tres obras clave

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Last updated 3:09 PM on 3/12/26
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25 Terms

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Romanticism (in literature)

A worldview that centers the individual—emotion, imagination, freedom—and often shows conflict between inner feeling and external reality, privileging subjectivity over cold logic.

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Subjectivity

An emphasis on personal, internal experience (what one feels and how one lives it) as a source of truth or meaning in a text.

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Posromanticism (Bécquer)

A later Romantic mode that keeps emotional intensity but expresses it with a more intimate, restrained, musical style rather than grand, dramatic language.

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“Yo” poético (lyric “I”)

The poetic voice presented as a personal self, often confessional, that frames the poem as an intimate expression of inner life.

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Emotion as truth (Romantic idea)

A principle in which a poem persuades not through facts or logic but by making the reader experience a feeling (longing, melancholy, wonder).

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Rima IV (Bécquer)

A poem that defends poetry as inexhaustible, arguing that as long as mystery exists in the world and emotion exists in humans, poetry will continue to exist.

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Creation of literature (theme)

A focus on where art comes from and how reality, emotion, and language relate—e.g., whether poetry is a finite “product” or a way of seeing.

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Accumulation of “mientras…” conditions

A rhetorical strategy in Rima IV that piles up repeated conditions (“as long as…”) to show there will always be material for poetry.

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Rima LIII (Bécquer)

A poem about love, memory, and loss that contrasts nature’s cyclical return with the irrepeatability of a specific, lost love.

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Cyclical time vs affective time

The contrast between nature’s repeating cycles (seasons/returns) and emotional time, in which a particular relationship or feeling cannot be recovered exactly.

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Irrepeatability (lo irrepetible)

The idea that something (especially a specific love) may have parallels later but cannot return in the same unique form again.

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Anaphora

Repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive lines (e.g., “Volverán…”), often creating rhythm and emphasis.

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Repetition-and-contrast structure (“Volverán… / pero…”)

A pattern in Rima LIII where repeated promises of return are broken by “but,” highlighting that what matters most (that love) will not return.

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Nature imagery (Bécquer)

Images like swallows or honeysuckle that function as emotional “proof” of a theme (cycles and return), not mere decoration.

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Tone (Rima IV vs Rima LIII)

The overall attitude: Rima IV tends to be affirmative/hopeful about poetry’s persistence, while Rima LIII tends to be melancholic and final about loss.

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Apostrophe / presence of the “tú”

Direct address to a “you,” especially in Rima LIII, turning the poem into an interpersonal scene and intensifying the sense of absence and emotional stakes.

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San Manuel Bueno, mártir (Unamuno)

A short novel centered on Don Manuel, a priest admired for goodness who suffers an inner crisis about faith, exploring doubt, ethics, and human need for consolation.

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Duality of being (la dualidad del ser)

A split between public role and private inner conflict—e.g., Don Manuel’s outward sanctity versus inward doubt/anguish.

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Ángela Carballino (narrator-witness)

The narrator who remembers and writes about Don Manuel; her testimony shapes the story and is colored by admiration and uncertainty rather than omniscient certainty.

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Testimonial narration

A storytelling mode based on recollections, impressions, and confessions, where meaning depends on perspective and limited access to “full” truth.

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Ambiguity (deliberate)

A technique in which the text refuses a single closed interpretation, forcing readers to argue with nuance about unresolved tensions (faith vs doubt, truth vs comfort).

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Symbolism of lake and mountain (Unamuno)

Landscape symbols that externalize psychology: the lake suggests depth, mystery, and what is hidden; the mountain suggests elevation, ideal, and what is visible—together mirroring inner division.

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Realism

A mode that portrays everyday life with verisimilitude, focusing on social detail, customs, language, and concrete conflicts.

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Naturalism

A harsher extension of Realism emphasizing determinism: how environment, poverty, violence, and social forces can trap individuals and crush agency.

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Las medias rojas (Pardo Bazán)

A naturalist story in which Ildara’s red stockings become the trigger for patriarchal violence; the father’s brutality destroys her chance to escape, exposing gendered power and social constraint.

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