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<dc:creator>Fernández Alonso, Alba</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2024</dc:date>
<dc:description>Langston Hughes, llegó como corresponsal de guerra a España en 1937. De esta experiencia profesional y vital surgió una amplia y variada producción que abarcó diferentes géneros literarios, entre los que destaca el poético. Dentro de este último, Hughes reserva un lugar al universo femenino dentro del entorno bélico que observa a su paso, e incorpora perfiles femeninos a su búsqueda universal de liberación. Este trabajo profundiza en los perfiles de la madre y la activista, mujeres que convergen en un escenario de calamidad y dolor en el que rezuman una potentísima fuerza emocional alejada de cualquier estereotipo de género.</dc:description>
<dc:description>Langston Hughes arrived as a war correspondent in Spain in 1937. This professional and life experience gave rise to a wide and diverse production that encompassed different literary genres, among which the poetic one stands out. Within it, Hughes reserves a space for the feminine universe in the war environment he observes as he passes by and incorporates women' s profiles into his universal quest for liberation. This work delves into the roles of the mother and the activist, women who converge in a scenario of calamity and pain in which they ooze a powerful emotional force far from any gender stereotype.</dc:description>
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<dc:identifier>https://hdl.handle.net/10259/11015</dc:identifier>
<dc:language>spa</dc:language>
<dc:publisher>Sílex</dc:publisher>
<dc:title>"The men all have gone, but women have stayed". Madres y activistas en la obra de Langston Hughes sobre la Guerra civil española</dc:title>
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<dcterms:alternative>«The men all have gone, but women have stayed». &#xd;
Mothers and activists in Langston Hughes' &#xd;
works on the Spanish Civil War</dcterms:alternative>
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