Required works by period · Key authors & themes · Literary devices in Spanish · Essay vocabulary
| Period / Movement | Dates | Key Works & Authors | Historical Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medieval | ~1100–1400 | Poema de mio Cid (Anónimo) | Reconquista; Christian vs. Muslim Spain; honor as social code |
| Renaissance / Picaresque | 1500s | Lazarillo de Tormes (Anónimo) | Social satire; birth of the novel; critique of Spanish clergy and aristocracy |
| Golden Age / Siglo de Oro | 1550–1680 | Cervantes Don Quijote; Lope de Vega Fuente Ovejuna; Sor Juana; Góngora; Quevedo | Spain at height of empire; Counter-Reformation; Baroque complexity |
| Romanticism / Costumbrismo | 1800–1880 | Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer Rimas; José de Espronceda | Liberal nationalism; emotion over reason; Spanish regional identity |
| Modernismo | 1880–1910 | Rubén Darío; Alfonsina Storni; Amado Nervo | Reaction against positivism; French Symbolist influence; aestheticism |
| Generation of 1898 | 1898–1930 | Antonio Machado; Miguel de Unamuno; Valle-Inclán | Crisis after loss of Cuba/Philippines; Spanish national identity |
| Vanguardia / Surrealism | 1920s–1940s | Federico García Lorca; Pablo Neruda (early); Rafael Alberti | Avant-garde experimentation; Spanish Civil War context |
| Boom Latinoamericano | 1960s–1970s | García Márquez Cien años; Borges; Cortázar; Rulfo Pedro Páramo | Political upheaval in Latin America; new narrative experimentation |
| Contemporary | 1970s–present | Isabel Allende; Rigoberta Menchú; Sandra Cisneros; Carmen Martín Gaite | Dictatorships and exile; feminist voices; diaspora identity |
| Author | Key Work(s) | Core Themes | Technique to Analyze |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cervantes | Don Quijote | Idealism vs. reality, fiction's power, self-deception | Unreliable narrator, metafiction, irony |
| Sor Juana | Hombres necios, Redondillas | Women's right to knowledge, sexual double standard, colonial Baroque | Paradox, apostrophe, logical argumentation in verse |
| Góngora | Mientras por competir | Carpe diem, transience of beauty, Baroque complexity | Culteranismo: hyperbaton, Latinisms, complex metaphor |
| Lope de Vega | Fuente Ovejuna | Collective honor vs. tyranny, peasant resistance, justifiable rebellion | Dramatic irony, collective protagonist, honor as social force |
| Rubén Darío | Lo fatal, Canción de otoño en primavera | Existential anguish, aestheticism, Latin American identity, modernismo | Musical verse, French Symbolism influence, synesthesia |
| Alfonsina Storni | Tú me quieres blanca, Peso ancestral | Feminist irony, sexual double standard, female subjectivity | Irony and reversal, apostrophe to male reader, body imagery |
| Antonio Machado | Proverbios y cantares, Campos de Castilla | Memory, time, Castilian landscape, Spain's decline after 1898 | Symbolism of landscape, elegy, philosophical aphorism |
| Federico García Lorca | Romance sonámbulo, Bodas de sangre, La casa de Bernarda Alba | Fate, repression, desire, duende, female oppression, death | Color symbolism (verde), polysemy, dramatic imagery, duende |
| Pablo Neruda | Poema 20, Oda al tomate | Loss, love, political commitment, everyday beauty | Free verse, catalog, elemental imagery |
| Jorge Luis Borges | El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan | Labyrinth, infinity, time, text, identity | Metafiction, unreliable narrator, philosophical paradox |
| Gabriel García Márquez | Cien años de soledad | Memory, solitude, cyclical time, Latin American history | Realismo mágico: supernatural as ordinary, hyperbole, repetition |
| Juan Rulfo | Pedro Páramo | Death, memory, caciquismo, fragmented identity | Fragmented narration, voices of the dead, non-linear time |
| Isabel Allende | La casa de los espíritus | Political violence, female solidarity, memory and testimony | Testimonio, magical elements, multigenerational narrative |
| Device | Definition & Example |
|---|---|
| Metáfora | Direct comparison without like/as: la vida es un sueño |
| Símil | Comparison using como: era suave como la brisa |
| Personificación | Human qualities to non-human: la noche habló |
| Anáfora | Repetition at start of successive lines: en tanto que… en tanto que… |
| Hipérbaton | Inverted word order for emphasis (Baroque especially) |
| Ironía | Saying opposite of meaning: Storni demanding men be pure when she is not |
| Paradoja | Contradiction that reveals truth: dichoso el árbol que apenas siente |
| Hipérbole | Extreme exaggeration: te lo he dicho mil veces |
| Encabalgamiento | Enjambment: sense continues past line end |
| Aliteración | Repeated consonant sounds for effect |
| Polisíndeton | Repeated conjunctions: y… y… y… (accumulation) |
| Asíndeton | Omitted conjunctions for rapid rhythm |
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Narrador omnisciente | Third-person all-knowing narrator |
| Narrador testigo | First-person peripheral narrator (observer) |
| Narrador autodiegético | First-person protagonist narrator |
| Analepsis / flashback | Narrative jumps backward in time |
| Prolepsis / anticipación | Narrative jumps forward (foreshadowing) |
| In medias res | Story begins mid-action, no exposition |
| Flujo de conciencia | Stream of consciousness; interior monologue |
| Realismo mágico | Supernatural presented as ordinary; García Márquez's defining technique |
| Function | Phrases |
|---|---|
| Analysis verbs | plasmar, reflejar, subrayar, evidenciar, poner de manifiesto, destacar, revelar |
| Naming technique | mediante, a través de, por medio de, valiéndose de, gracias al uso de |
| Comparing | a diferencia de, en contraste con, de manera similar a, tanto… como, mientras que |
| Contextualizing | en el contexto de, enmarcado en, inscrito en la tradición de, en el marco de |
| Claiming | se puede afirmar que, cabe señalar, resulta evidente que, conviene subrayar |
| Concluding | en definitiva, en suma, así pues, por todo lo expuesto, en conclusión |