
Representing Others in Medieval Iberian Literature
2007
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This book focuses on the ways exiled medieval Iberian intellectuals—Jewish, Arabic, and Christian—used canonical discourses to shape/create cultural models that "go against the grain," i.e. that differ significantly from official European and Eastern discourses. Representing Others examines how Iberian authors used the fictional go-between to reflect on their role as cultural intermediaries and to open up spaces in the dominant discourse for the variety of voices that characterizes medieval Iberian culture. Representing Others explores the processes of identity formation in a society/geographical region often excluded from discussions of both European and Middle Eastern histories and literatures.
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Author
Michelle M. Hamilton
Author · 1 books
Michelle M. Hamilton, Ph.D. (Spanish & Arabic Languages and Literatures, UC Berkeley, 2001; M.A., Hispanic Languages & Literatures, University of California, Davis, 1995; B.A., Spanish Language & Literature, University of Texas, Austin, 1991), is Director of Medieval Studies and Professor of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities.