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Representing Spain : cultural image and geographic knowledge in National Geographic’s articles on Spain (1888–1936)

Auteur(s) et Affiliation(s)

Dept. of Humanities: History, Geography and Art, Carlos III Univ., Madrid, Espagne
Dept. of Geography, Autonomous Univ., Barcelona, Espagne
Dept. of Geography, Univ., Santiago de Compostela, Espagne


Description :
This article analyzes the vision of Spain conveyed by National Geographic Magazine (NGM) in the period from 1888 to 1936. Firstly, it examines the connections between the type of representations typically found in NGM and the cultural stereotypes that existed about Spain in the United States at the time, notions mainly rooted in the North American tradition of travel writing, as well as in US Hispanism. Secondly, it analyzes the image of Spain disseminated in NGM against the backdrop of the geo-historical, political, and socio-economic context of the country in this period, a particularly important analytical step given the profound differences between Spain and the US at the time. Special attention is paid to NGM’s editorial style (much more close to travel journalism than to academic geography descriptions of the country), as well as to the influence of Romantic paradigm and the importance given to Spain’s regional diversity in the image conveyed by the magazine.


Type de document :
Article de périodique

Source :
GeoJournal, issn : 0343-2521, 2014, vol. 79, n°. 5, p. 539-556, nombre de pages : 18, Références bibliographiques : 75 ref.

Date :
2014

Editeur :
Pays édition : Allemagne, Heidelberg, Springer

Langue :
Anglais
Droits :
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