Yahoo Suche Web Suche

  1. amazon.de wurde im letzten Monat von mehr als 1.000.000 Nutzern besucht

    Entdecken tausende Produkte. Lesen Kundenbewertungen und finde Bestseller. Aktuelle Buch-Tipps und Rezensionen. Alle Bücher natürlich versandkostenfrei

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Concepción Méndez Cuesta (Madrid, 27 July 1898 – Coyoacán, Mexico, 7 December 1986) was a leading Spanish poet and dramatist and member of the Generation of '27 who became known in the literary world under the name Concha Mendez.

  2. Concha Méndez Cuesta war eine spanische Dichterin und Dramatikerin der Generación del 27, die vor allem für ihre Lyrik bekannt ist. Sie war eine der Frauen in der Bewegung Las Sinsombrero.

  3. Madrid, 1898 – Ciudad de México, 1986. Concha Méndez was an exemplary modern woman. A traveller, poet, playwright and editor, she created the journal Héroe with her husband. This publication joined key Generación del 27 names.

  4. Méndez Cuesta, Concha Poet, playwright and pioneer in the defense of women’s rights, she was born in Madrid on July 27, 1898 and died in exile in Mexico on December 7, 1986. She was part of the Generation of ‘27.

  5. In Spanish literature: Women poets. Concha Méndez published four major poetry collections before the Civil War drove her into exile. Drawing upon traditional popular forms and the oral tradition, Méndez’s prewar poetry—such as that in Vida a vida (1932; “Life to Life”)—exudes optimism and vitality, recalling the neopopular airs of ...

  6. Concha Méndez, nacida en Madrid en 1898 y fallecida en Ciudad de México en 1986, fue una poeta y dramaturga española que, contemporánea de la generación literaria del 27, formó parte del grupo de las Sinsombrero. Fue una pionera en la defensa de los derechos de la mujer.

  7. CONCHA MÉNDEZ'S FEMINIST THIRD SPACE IN SURTIDOR MEGAN BRIGGS MAGNANT University of California, Berkeley Concha Méndez' s unique brand of feminism in her poetry, particularly in the 1928 collection Surtidor , addresses funda-mental questions that have accompanied feminist thought in Spain and beyond, questions that can often separate dif-