994 resultados para Castrillo, García de Haro y Avellaneda, Conde de


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El presente texto busca dilucidar las tratativas diplomáticas entre García Moreno y la Santa Sede que ocurrieron entre el 1861 y 1866 y cuyo fin era conseguir el Concordato: un pacto que el Presidente ecuatoriano consideraba fundamental para la realización de su proyecto de reformas. Frente a un país lacerado por luchas internas y dividido entre sí, era necesario un cambio enérgico para establecer el orden social y la unión nacional. Paladino de la reforma debía ser, según García Moreno, el clero a su vez reformado y vuelto ejemplo de virtud para restituir el orden y la moral al país entero. Entonces, era primordial un Concordato con la Santa Sede para imponer la reforma del clero y establecer los límites entre poder religioso y estatal. No obstante el Concordato no representó una solución fácil e inmediata al cambio, en cuanto planteó una serie de contrastes, discusiones, reformulaciones y cambios que desvelaron los intereses que rodeaban al poder estatal y religioso en el país. En este contexto la Santa Sede iba a representar una fuente legitimadora del poder religioso, demostrando su preferencia en tratar las cuestiones con el Presidente ecuatoriano y su legítimo gobierno, marginando el parlamento. El Concordato resultó ser un documento que permitió a García Moreno fortalecer su control sobre la Iglesia ecuatoriana y mediar con la Santa Sede algunas cuestiones, sobre todo la inherente el diezmo, obteniendo una mayor ventaja económica para el Estado. Soluciones que, no fueron definitivas, sino que dejaron abierta la discusión para ulteriores tratativas.

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En este texto el autor se propone cotejar la historia de Nay y Sinar incluida en la novela María, de Jorge Isaacs (1867), con la de Bernabé en Sab (publicada en Madrid en 1841), de Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda. Esta exploración busca, por un lado, crear un contrapunto de ambos textos, por otro lado, se propone pasar revista a temas como la construcción de lo masculino en los dos textos, la posición antiesclavista de las mismas y Madre Natura como antagonista y coadyuvante de los protagonistas. Para cerrar este trabajo el autor aplicará un par de ideas de Benedict Anderson intentando explicar lo siguiente: los personajes de Isaacs y Gómez de Avellaneda provienen de una comunidad imaginada perdida y se ven en la imposibilidad de reproducir en un contexto diferente los límites de ese reino que ya no existe o que quizá no existió, por ser parte de la imaginación comunitaria.

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In this thesis, the main male characters in three of the plays written by Federico García Lorca are analysed with the aim of seeingthe role they play in the frustration of desire. After two chapters dedicated to a review of published critical studies on Lorca and tocertain theoretical considerations, Chapter Three examines desire drawing on Ubersfeld's actancial model and observes that thesemale characters can be divided into two groups: those who are desired and those who are undesired.In Chapter Four this classification is linked to an analysis of absence, prohibition and lack. Absence is here defined not asrelated to their non-appearance on stage but rather to their non-presence in the lives of the desiring female protagonists. It isobserved that a number of male characters are absent in the plays mainly due to death or a journey. As far as prohibition isconcerned, in two of the works, there is a moral code associated with concepts such as "honour" and "decency", which blocks thefemale characters' access to the males they desire. Chapter Four also shows how several characters can be considered as lacking inthe sense that they do not possess the ideal male qualities contained in the plays. This chapter reaches the conclusion that desiredmale characters are either absent or forbidden in the world of the desiring female, whereas undesired male characters are lacking inthe sense that they fail to live up to the ideal highlighted in the plays.Chapter Five analyses the female characters' perception of the male figures, making use of René Girard's notion of"transfiguration", which alludes to a process of idealisation of the object of desire. Our analysis reveals a connection betweendesire, denied access to the object of desire and transfiguration in the main subjects of desire. The phenomenon of "transfiguration"has several functions in the play: firstly, the creation of hyperbolical male characters; secondly, that of transmitting the intensity ofthe desire experienced and, finally, the highlighting of the lack of certain qualities in several male characters.We thus observe that, in these three plays written by García Lorca, Girard's pessimistic view of desire is confirmed, since desireneeds a series of obstacles, such as absence or prohibition, to survive. However, this is not the only explanation for the frustrationof desire: other factors, like the actions of certain male characters or destiny, also play a decisive role.

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This article presents a project formulated by the president of the Sovereign State of Santander, Solon Witches, to open new trade routes in order to create and maintain a network of power in the department of Garcia Rovira. First, the text highlights the political activity of General Witches to help his region; second, the commercial activities which surrounded his network of friends and family. Finally, the text answers the question of how associations worked around a main character in order to complete commercial transactions in a specific region.

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Fil: Barandica, María Guadalupe.

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Fil: Verstraete, Miguel. Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Filosofía y Letras