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literary essayist

  • 1 ensayista

    f. & m.
    essayist.
    * * *
    1 essayist
    * * *
    * * *
    masculino y femenino essayist
    * * *
    Ex. The Eiffel Tower is recognized as the universal symbol of Paris, and has stood as the focus of attention of a large number of poets, novelists, dramatists, essayists, and journalists throughout the world.
    ----
    * ensayista literario = literary essayist.
    * * *
    masculino y femenino essayist
    * * *

    Ex: The Eiffel Tower is recognized as the universal symbol of Paris, and has stood as the focus of attention of a large number of poets, novelists, dramatists, essayists, and journalists throughout the world.

    * ensayista literario = literary essayist.

    * * *
    essayist
    * * *

    ensayista mf essayist
    * * *
    essayist
    * * *
    m/f essayist
    * * *
    : essayist

    Spanish-English dictionary > ensayista

  • 2 literario

    adj.
    literary.
    * * *
    1 literary
    * * *
    (f. - literaria)
    adj.
    * * *
    * * *
    - ria adjetivo literary
    * * *
    Ex. On the other hand, in an automated system we would have a difficult time convincing the machine that Mr. Auden's death was not the cause for the sudden appearance on the literary scene of a new author.
    ----
    * análisis literario = literary analysis.
    * artes de creación literaria y artística, las = creative arts, the.
    * círculo literario = literary circle.
    * clásico literario = literary classic.
    * comentario literario = literary analysis.
    * crítica literaria = literary criticism.
    * crítico literario = literary critic, book reviewer.
    * documento literario = literary document.
    * ensayista literario = literary essayist.
    * estilo literario = writing style.
    * estudios literarios = literary studies.
    * género literario = genre.
    * historia literaria = literary history.
    * no literario = non-literary.
    * novela literaria = literary novel.
    * recital literario = literary award.
    * redactor literario = literary editor.
    * registrar como propiedad literaria = copyright.
    * subgénero literario = subgenre [sub-genre].
    * teoría literaria = literary theory.
    * velada literaria = literary evening.
    * vida del mundo literario = literary life.
    * vida literaria = literary life.
    * * *
    - ria adjetivo literary
    * * *

    Ex: On the other hand, in an automated system we would have a difficult time convincing the machine that Mr. Auden's death was not the cause for the sudden appearance on the literary scene of a new author.

    * análisis literario = literary analysis.
    * artes de creación literaria y artística, las = creative arts, the.
    * círculo literario = literary circle.
    * clásico literario = literary classic.
    * comentario literario = literary analysis.
    * crítica literaria = literary criticism.
    * crítico literario = literary critic, book reviewer.
    * documento literario = literary document.
    * ensayista literario = literary essayist.
    * estilo literario = writing style.
    * estudios literarios = literary studies.
    * género literario = genre.
    * historia literaria = literary history.
    * no literario = non-literary.
    * novela literaria = literary novel.
    * recital literario = literary award.
    * redactor literario = literary editor.
    * registrar como propiedad literaria = copyright.
    * subgénero literario = subgenre [sub-genre].
    * teoría literaria = literary theory.
    * velada literaria = literary evening.
    * vida del mundo literario = literary life.
    * vida literaria = literary life.

    * * *
    literary
    * * *

    literario
    ◊ - ria adjetivo

    literary
    literario,-a adjetivo literary

    ' literario' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    ancha
    - ancho
    - consagración
    - literaria
    - seudónima
    - seudónimo
    - verso
    English:
    literary
    * * *
    literario, -a adj
    literary
    * * *
    adj literary
    * * *
    literario, - ria adj
    : literary
    * * *
    literario adj literary

    Spanish-English dictionary > literario

  • 3 ensayista literario

    Ex. This paper continues the debate over the consternation caused in the library world by literary essayist, Nicholson Baker, who has attacked the destruction of original newspapers once they have been microfilmed.
    * * *

    Ex: This paper continues the debate over the consternation caused in the library world by literary essayist, Nicholson Baker, who has attacked the destruction of original newspapers once they have been microfilmed.

    Spanish-English dictionary > ensayista literario

  • 4 causar consternación

    v.
    to consternate, to appall.
    * * *
    (v.) = cause + consternation
    Ex. This paper continues the debate over the consternation caused in the library world by literary essayist, Nicholson Baker, who has attacked the destruction of original newspapers once they have been microfilmed.
    * * *
    (v.) = cause + consternation

    Ex: This paper continues the debate over the consternation caused in the library world by literary essayist, Nicholson Baker, who has attacked the destruction of original newspapers once they have been microfilmed.

    Spanish-English dictionary > causar consternación

  • 5 elzevirista

    elzevirista s.m. e f. feature writer; literary journalist; essayist.
    * * *
    m.pl. -i, f.pl. -e [eldzevi'rista] sostantivo maschile e sostantivo femminile = literary contributor
    * * *
    elzevirista
    m.pl. -i, f.pl. -e /eldzevi'rista/
    m. e f.
    = literary contributor.

    Dizionario Italiano-Inglese > elzevirista

  • 6 Literature

       The earliest known examples of literary writing in the Portuguese language is a collection of songbooks ( cancioneiros) that date from the 12th century, written by anonymous court troubadours, aristocrats, and clerics with poetic and musical talent. In the 13th and 14th centuries, ballads ( romanceiros) became popular at court. One of these written after the battle of Aljubarrota is considered to be the Portuguese equivalent of the English Arthurian legend. Literary prose in Portuguese began in the 14th century, with the compilation of chronicles ( chrónicos) written by Fernão Lopes de Castenhada who was commissioned by King Duarte (1430-38) to write a history of the House of Aviz.
       During the 15th and 16th centuries, Portuguese chroniclers turned their attention to the discoveries and the Portuguese overseas empire. The Portuguese discoveries in India and Asia were chronicled by João de Barros, whose writing appeared posthumously under the pen name of Diogo Do Couto; Fernão Lopes de Castenhade wrote a 10-volume chronicle of the Portuguese in India. The most famous chronicle from this period was the Peregrinação (Pilgrimage), a largely true adventure story and history of Portugal that was as popular among 17th-century readers in Iberia as was Miguel de Cer-vantes's Don Quixote. Portugal's most celebrated work of national literature, The Lusiads ( Os Lusíadas), written by Luís de Camões chronicled Vasco da Gama's voyage to India (1497-99) within the context of the history of Portugal.
       During the period when Portugal was under Spanish domination (1580-1640), the preferred language of literary expression was Castilian Spanish. The greatest writer of this period was Francisco Manuel de Melo, who wrote in Castilian and Portuguese. His most famous work is an eyewitness account of the 1640 Catalan revolt against Castile, Historia de los Movimientos y Separación de Cata-luna (1645), which allowed the Portuguese monarchy to regain its independence that same year.
       Little of note was written during the 17th century with the exception of Letters of a Portuguese Nun, an enormously popular work in the French language thought to have been written by Sister Mariana Alcoforado to a French officer Noel Bouton, Marquise de Chamilly.
       Modern Portuguese writing began in the early 19th century with the appearance of the prose-fiction of João Baptista de Almeida Garrett and the historian-novelist Alexandre Herculano. The last half of the 19th century was dominated by the Generation of 1870, which believed that Portugal was, due to the monarchy and the Catholic Church, a European backwater. Writers such as José Maria Eça de Queirós dissected the social decadence of their day and called for reform and national renewal. The most famous Portuguese poet of the 20th century is, without doubt, Fernando Pessoa, who wrote poetry and essays in English and Portuguese under various names. António Ferro (1895-1956) published best-selling accounts of the right-wing dictatorships in Italy and Spain that endeared him to Prime Minister António de Oliveira Salazar, who made him the Estado Novo's secretary of national propaganda.
       The various responses of the Portuguese people to the colonial African wars (1961-75) were chronicled by António Lobo Antunes. In 1998, the noted Portuguese novelist, poet, essayist, and travel writer, José Saramago was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, the first writer in the Portuguese language of whatever nationality to be so honored. His most famous novels translated into English include: Baltazar and Blimunda (1987), The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis (1991), and The History of the Siege of Lisbon (1996).

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Literature

  • 7 Saramago, José

    (1922-)
       Recipient of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Literature, Saramago, a noted novelist, poet, essayist, and travel writer, is the first writer in the Portuguese language, of whatever nationality, to be so honored. Saramago began his career as a journalist, editor, and translator, and then became a full-time novelist. Born in the village of Azinhaga, Ribatejo province, Saramago worked as a journalist and directed the literary supplement of the Diário de Lisboa, a daily paper in the capital, as well as being an editor with the Diário de Notícias. Among his other writings from earlier decades is his work as a literary critic for the liberal, progressive journal Seara Nova. His reputation as a writer rests chiefly on the value of his novels, most of them translated now into more than 20 foreign languages and published widely outside Portugal, but he is also a versatile poet, playwright, travel writer, and political commentator. His membership in the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) and later his moving from residence in Portugal to the Canary Islands with his Spanish wife elicited ongoing discussions. Among his more famous novels that have been rendered into the English language and widely praised are Baltazar and Blimunda (1987), The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis (1991), and The History of the Siege of Lisbon (1996).

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Saramago, José

  • 8 Generation of 1870

       A generation of Portuguese writers and intellectuals and a postregeneration phase of the country's intellectual history in the last third of the 19th century. Many of them graduates of Coimbra University, these writers, whose work challenged conventional wisdom of their day, included J. Oliveira Martins, economist and social scientist; Eça de Queirós, novelist; Antero de Quental, poet; Ramalho Ortigão, editor and essayist; Teófilo Braga, literary historian; and the geographer and diplomat abroad, Jaime Batalha Reis. Coming of political age at the time of the Franco-Prussian War, the French Commune, and the French Third Republic (1870-71), these Portuguese intellectuals believed that economically weak Portugal had a polity and society in the grip of a pervasive decadence and inertia. They called for reform and renewal.
       Critical of romanticism, they were realists and neorealists and espoused the ideas of Karl Marx, Pierre Proudhon, and Auguste Comte. They called for revolution through the establishment of republicanism and socialism, and they were convinced that Portugal's backwardness and poverty were due primarily to the ancient influences of a weakened monarchy and the Catholic Church. This group of like-minded but also distinctive thinkers had an important impact on Portuguese letters and elite culture, but only a minor effect on contemporary politics and government.
       Like so many other movements in modern Portugal, the Generation of 1870's initiatives began as essentially a protest by university students of Coimbra, who confronted the status quo and sought to change their world by means of change and innovation in action and ideas. In certain respects, Portugal's Generation of 1870 resembled neighboring Spain's Generation of 1898, which began its "rebellion" in ideas following a disastrous foreign war (the Spanish-American War, 1898).

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Generation of 1870

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