Unit 5: La Generación del 98 y el Modernismo

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50 Terms

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Disaster of 1898 (Desastre del 98)

Spain’s symbolic breaking point after losing Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines; triggered a national crisis about decline, identity, and regeneration.

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Spanish-American War

Conflict that led to Spain’s loss of its last major colonies, intensifying feelings of national decline and prompting cultural self-examination.

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National “examination of conscience”

Late-19th/early-20th-century Spanish impulse to question what Spain is and what it should become after imperial loss and perceived backwardness.

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Modernization (Spain)

Industrialization and urban growth that strained traditional values and fueled literary tensions (tradition vs. progress, community vs. alienation).

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Agrarian vs. urban-industrial opposition

Cultural conflict between slower, hierarchical rural life and faster, unequal, changing city life; a frequent backdrop for themes of identity and crisis.

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U.S. imperial influence in Latin America

Rising U.S. power in the region that pushed many writers to blend aesthetics with political critique and cultural self-defense.

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Cosmopolitanism (Modernista)

Desire to participate in an international artistic circuit through references to European/classical culture and refined artistic forms.

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Aesthetic refuge

Strategy of responding to modern crisis by creating beauty, musicality, and idealized worlds as an alternative to a “vulgar” present.

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Cultural/moral critique

Literary strategy that denounces injustice and questions faith, power, hypocrisy, and national identity in a moment of social crisis.

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Krausismo

Philosophical current influential in Spain emphasizing individual freedom and the importance of education; supports literature as ethical/pedagogical reflection.

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Modernismo (Hispanic literary movement)

Late-19th/early-20th-century artistic renewal focused on beauty, musicality, sensory imagery, symbolism, and new poetic language (not simply technology).

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Symbolism (French influence)

Aesthetic movement that values suggestive symbols and musical language; strongly shapes Modernista imagery and atmosphere.

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Parnassianism (French influence)

Movement stressing formal perfection, elegance, and “art for art’s sake,” influencing Modernismo’s refined technique and style-consciousness.

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Musicality (in Modernista poetry)

The poem’s music-like movement created through sound patterns (e.g., alliteration, anaphora) and careful word choice, not just rhyme.

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Alliteration

Repetition of consonant sounds to build musical effect and mood (solemnity, force, melancholy) in poetry.

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Anaphora

Repetition of initial words/phrases across lines or clauses to create rhythm, emphasis, and accumulating intensity.

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Sensory imagery

Language appealing to sight, sound, smell, taste, or touch; central to Modernismo’s goal of intensified, refined perception.

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Synesthesia

A Modernista device that crosses senses (e.g., “sonorous color”); more specific than general sensory imagery.

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Modernista symbolism (swan, marble, gardens, gold, towers)

Recurring symbols and luxurious settings used to project ideals of beauty/authority, nostalgia for order, or indirect critique of the present.

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Evasion vs. commitment (Modernismo)

Key tension in Modernismo between escaping into the exotic/ideal and engaging politically through identity-affirmation or anti-imperial critique.

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Rubén Darío

Central Modernista poet who revolutionized Spanish poetic language and showed that refined style can also confront political power.

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José Martí

Major essayist who argues for Latin American self-knowledge and self-governance; uses rhetoric to build cultural unity and resist imperial threats.

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Transatlantic literary consciousness

Modernismo’s circulation between Latin America and Spain, shaping both sides and creating a shared cultural dialogue.

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Generation of ’98 (Generación del 98)

Spanish literary sensitivity after 1898 focused on national identity, moral/existential crisis, social critique, and cultural regeneration.

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Regeneration (of Spain)

Idea that Spain needs renewal—often via education and cultural awakening—after imperial loss and perceived political/social stagnation.

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Existential inquietude (’98)

Focus on meaning, authenticity, death, and faith/doubt; politics appears filtered through ethical and existential questions.

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Landscape as argument (’98)

Use of austere towns and terrain as metaphors for Spain’s “soul,” turning setting into a way of thinking about identity and crisis.

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Narrative innovation (’98)

Experimentation with form (fragmentation, interiority, blurred reality/fiction) to express uncertainty and modern crisis.

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Irony, satire, and parody (’98 tools)

Techniques used to expose social contradictions and challenge official “truths,” strengthening critique through tone and distortion.

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Miguel de Unamuno

Philosopher-writer of the ’98 known for introspective, existential works centered on identity, faith/doubt, and the fear of death.

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San Manuel Bueno, mártir

Unamuno novella exploring ethical tension between inner doubt and public faith, plus the social function of religion in a community.

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Unreliable/limited narrator (Ángela Carballino)

In San Manuel Bueno, the narrating voice selects and interprets events, potentially idealizing; point of view shapes “truth.”

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The village as a collective character

Community in San Manuel Bueno that depends on Don Manuel; highlights religion as social glue and shared need for meaning.

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Lake/mountain symbolism (San Manuel Bueno)

Landscape imagery supporting themes of depth, concealment, stillness, and spiritual conflict rather than serving as mere scenery.

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Tragic irony (San Manuel Bueno)

Tension where the priest’s public role as a model of faith contrasts with inner doubt, reframing “martyrdom” as internal sacrifice.

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Niebla (1914)

Unamuno novel that blurs reality and fiction; the protagonist questions authorship and existence to probe identity and free will.

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Metafiction (reality/fiction boundary)

Technique where a text draws attention to its fictionality (e.g., a character questioning being fictional) to explore existence and agency.

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Del sentimiento trágico de la vida

Unamuno’s essay on the human struggle between longing for immortality/meaning and awareness of finitude; frames his fiction’s conflicts.

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Pío Baroja

’98 novelist with a frank, often pessimistic realismo crítico focusing on injustice, corruption, and marginal lives amid social change.

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Realismo crítico

Narrative approach that depicts social reality to expose systemic problems (inequality, corruption) rather than to idealize or merely entertain.

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Camino de perfección (1902)

Baroja novel about a young man’s spiritual/intellectual search for meaning; protagonist is Fernando Ossorio.

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La lucha por la vida (trilogy)

Baroja’s series portraying harsh urban marginality and the struggle to survive, highlighting inequality and social failure.

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El árbol de la ciencia (1911)

Baroja novel following Andrés Hurtado, a young doctor in Madrid, confronting modernity, science, suffering, and the intellectual’s role.

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Azorín (José Martínez Ruiz)

’98 writer known for prosa impresionista: evocative attention to small sensory details, time, memory, and nostalgia for tradition.

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Prosa impresionista y lírica

Style that captures fleeting impressions with rhythmic, poetic prose to reflect on transience, memory, and cultural identity.

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La voluntad (1902)

Azorín novel exploring the tension between personal will and determinism shaped by environment, society, and family (often rural).

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Determinism (in ’98 contexts)

Idea that circumstances (social, familial, environmental) strongly shape individuals; texts often stage a tension with personal will, not total fatalism.

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Castilla (Azorín)

Essay that uses the Castilian landscape and history to reflect on Spanish identity, showing space as a vehicle for national thought.

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Esperpento

Valle-Inclán’s method of systematically deforming reality (grotesque caricature, exaggerated language) to reveal bitter social truth and critique power.

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Luces de bohemia

Valle-Inclán play using esperpento and a nocturnal Madrid journey to expose institutional corruption, social misery, and fractured culture.

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