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Dr Frederic Barbera
Senior Lecturer in Spanish and Catalan Studies Degree: BA (Birmingham), MA (Toronto), PhD (Aberdeen) Associated research centres and groups: Diasporas, Peripheries and Identities, Literature and Film Current Teaching
Research InterestsMy general research interests are 20th-Century Spanish and Catalan narrative and cultural history, with special attention to the area of cultures in contact. I am working on an interdisciplinary research project, Peripheral Identities, based at Lancaster University, dedicated to the study of 'peripheral' cultures and identities in Europe. The publication in December 2002 of a special issue of National Identities entitled Peripheral Identities in the Iberian Context , with a critical introduction by Barberà and Crameri, is the first tangible outcome of the Peripheral Identities research group. The study of the interplay of literature, cultural tradition and identity forms the basis of a new guest lecture series for 2009/10, "Reciprocal Gazes on Catalonia" (http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fass/projects/peripheral/events.html) which focuses on the narratives of multicultural writers. This has been organized as a series of papers to be given at Lancaster, starting on 9 February 2009 with J-L Marfany (Liverpool), 'A Cuckoo in the Nest? Castilian in Catalonia, 1500-1870',and continuing on 10 March with Francesca Ardolino (Barcelona),'Salvatore Quasimondo in Post-War Barcelona' etc. This new initiative is in part a follow-up to the colloquium "Reciprocal Gazes on the Iberian/British Other", successfully organized by F Barberà and K Crameri at Lancaster in 2004. As was the case with the 2001 and 2004 conferences, an anticipated outcome of the 2009/10 series will be the publication of research papersas a collective volume. In 2003, I obtained two grants, one from the Government of the Balearic Islands and one from the Catalan Government, to study the narrative works of writer Baltasar Porcel. In 2005-6 I was awarded a grant by the Institut Ramon Llull to carry out the study Barcelona as seen by its writers and cultural agents. Major and most recent publications: Epistolario de Gabriel Miró , Alicante: Instituto de Cultura Juan Gil Albert, I. R. Macdonald and F. Barberà, eds, Vol. XX, Obras Completas, 2009. Baltasar Porcel o l'òptica aberrant sobre el món, Barcelona: Publicacions de l'Abadia de Montserrat, 2007. Gabriel Miró and Catalan Culture. The Forging of the Literary Language in the Context of his Poetics , New Orleans: University Press of the South, 2004. Els bascos, els catalans i Espanya by Daniele Conversi. Edited and translated by Frederic Barberà. Lleida: Pagès Editors, 2004. Peripheral Identities in the Iberian Context (Special Issue of National Identities ), F. Barberà and K. Crameri, eds, Vol. 4, Num. 3, 2002. Potential Doctoral Proposals20th-Century Catalan and Spanish Narrative Cultural Identity European Comparative Literature Cultures in Contact Further information:Further information: I am currently supervising three PhD theses: one on the English literary influence on the narrative works by Catalan writer Josep Vallverdú, one with Maurice Slawinsky on Italian Neo-Realism in literature, and one more with Graham Bartram on the new culture of peace in the Basque Country. EventsNew major publication co-edited by Lancaster scholar: Gabriel Miró, Epistolario, edited by Ian R. Macdonald and Frederic Barberà, Obras completas, vol. XX. Alicante: Instituto de Cultura Juan Gil-Albert, 2009. Gabriel Miró is a major novelist of the first thirty years of the twentieth century, a particularly brilliant period in Spanish culture. He was a writer of comparable achievement to Virginia Woolf, and was translated into English and French during his life time. Ian R. Macdonald (Aberdeen) and Frederic Barberà (Lancaster) have worked together for some years on the joint major project of publishing all of the known letters of Gabriel Miró. Such a complete collection of a writer's letters is still a fairly uncommon undertaking in Spanish scholarship, especially at the level of editing quality they have set themselves, and with a team of only two. The many problems have included finding many previously unknown letters, dating them, and creating full explanatory annotation. This epistolary constitutes an extremely rich document as it substantially portrays the cultural history of Spain in the early 20th century. Among Miró's addressees are the Nobel prize for literature J.R.Jiménez, the composer Enric Granados, the passeur culturel Valéry Larbaud (who discovered Miró and James Joyce to the French), or Antonio Maura, Prime Minister of Spain on various occasions and director of the Royal Spanish Academy for many years. The volume is part of the Complete Works currently being published. This volume is to be officially launched shortly in Madrid and Alicante. Other Interests and HobbiesCivilized cycling ('I stop when I'm tired'); exploring village life; going to the movies. Associated Keywords: Catalan, Comparative literature, European, European identity, European languages, Identity, Spanish, The novel, Twentieth-century culture, Twentieth-century literature
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Contact DetailsTel: +44 (0)1524 593000 Room: Bowland North, B42 Office Hour: Wednesdays 10.00-11.00 View Staff Profiles |
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Bowland North, Lancaster University,
LA1 4YT, UK |
Tel: +44 (0) 1524 593005 E-mail: delc@lancaster.ac.uk |
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