512
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Research Article

A queer problem: writing sapphic anarchism in Spanish Civil War fiction

ORCID Icon

References

  • Ackelsberg, M. A. 1991. Free Women of Spain: Anarchism and the Struggle for the Emancipation of Women. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
  • Armand, É. 1932. Sexualismo revolucionario, Translated by Urbano Carrasco. Valencia: Ediciones Mañana.
  • Arquimbau, R. M. 2016. Quaranta anys perduts, Edited by Julià Guillamon. Barcelona: Editorial Comanegra.
  • Arquimbau, R. M. 2021. Forty Lost Years, Translated by Peter Bush. London: Fum d’Estampa Press.
  • Byrne, C. “Montserrat.” Unpublished manuscript, 14 January 2023, typescript.
  • Cavalié, E. 2014. “‘It’s Like Gold Leaf, and Now It’s Rising, Peeling away’: Britishness and Exoticism in Sarah Waters’s The Night Watch.” In Exoticizing the Past in Contemporary Neo-Historical Fiction, edited by E. Rousselot, 84–100. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Cleminson, R., and F. Vázquez García. 2007. ‘Los Invisibles’: A History of Male Homosexuality in Spain, 1850-1940. Cardiff: University of Wales Press.
  • De Groot, J. 2010. The Historical Novel. Oxford: Routledge.
  • Doña, J. 2019. Desde la noche y la niebla. https://omegalfa.es/downloadfile.php?file=libros/desde-la-noche-y-la-niebla.pdf. Accessed 22/02/23.
  • Fisher, R. 2021. Women Political Prisoners After the Spanish Civil War: Narratives of Resistance and Survival. Eastbourne: Sussex Academic.
  • Freccero, C. 2015. “The Queer Time of Lesbian Literature: History and Temporality.” In The Cambridge Companion to Lesbian Literature, edited by J. Medd, 19–31. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • La Revista Blanca. “Consultorio General” in La Revista Blanca, 19 April 1935, p. 380. http://hemerotecadigital.bne.es/issue.vm?id=0002942081&search=&lang=en. Accessed 17/01/2022.
  • Lorusso, I. 2020. Fighting Women. London: Freedom Press.
  • Martín Moruno, D. 2010. “Becoming Visible and Real: Images of Republican Women During the Spanish Civil War.” Visual Culture & Gender 5:3–15.
  • Medd, J. 2011. “Encountering the Past in Recent Lesbian and Gay Fiction.” In The Cambridge Companion to Gay and Lesbian Writing, edited by H. Stevens, 167–184. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Ochoa, D. 2010. “Re-membering Lesbian Desire in Belle Epoque, Soldados de Salamina, and Las trece rosas.” Letras femeninas 36 (1): 87–101.
  • O’Neill, C. 2003. Una mujer en la guerra de España. Madrid: Oberon.
  • Poch y Gascón, A. 1932. La vida sexual de la mujer. Valencia: Luis Morote.
  • San de Velilla, A. 1932. Sodoma y lesbos modernas. Pederastas y safistas, estudiados en la clínica, en los libros y en la historia. Barcelona: Carlos Ameller.
  • Saornil Lucía, S. 1920. “Nocturnos de cristal.” Accessed 27/04/23 Cosmópolis XI:486. https://hemerotecadigital.bne.es/hd/es/results?id=d565d83c-497e-4e55-91ac-d9595c00b8f1&page=8.
  • Sentamans, T. 2015. “Higos, plátanos, tortillas y otros tropos. Apuntes para un análisis del imaginario de la mujer como sujeto sexual active a través de la ilustración sicalíptica del primer tercio del siglo XX.” In Mujeres bajo sospecha: Memoria y sexualidad 1930-1980, edited by R. Osborne, 49–68. Madrid: Editorial Fundamentos.
  • Simonis, A. 2009. Yo no soy ésa que tú te imaginas. El lesbianismo en la narrativa española del siglo XX a través de sus estereotipos. Alicante: Universidad de Alicante.
  • Soriano Jiménez, I. C. 2022. Lucía Sánchez Saornil: Entre mujeres anarquistas. Madrid: La Linterna Sorda.
  • Turbutt, S. 2022. “Sexual Revolution and the Spanish Anarchist Press: Bodies, Birth Control, and Free Love in the 1930s Advice Columns of La Revista Blanca.” In Contemporary European History, 1–19. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0960777322000315.
  • Waugh, P. 2001. Metafiction: The Theory and Practice of Self-Conscious Fiction. London: Routledge. ProQuest Ebook Central.