Hispanic Studies Review (HSR) is an international refereed journal published twice a year by the Department of Hispanic Studies at the College of Charleston. The journal welcomes submissions on cultural studies, applied and theoretical linguistics, and the literatures of the Spanish-speaking worlds and their contact zones. HSR particularly invites scholarship with approaches that are interdisciplinary and/or engage innovative dialogues. HSR only accepts electronic submissions, and each manuscript will undergo a rigorous double-blind peer review.
- Vol. 7, Issue 1, 2023La publicación póstuma de los Apólogos de Luis Martín-Santos en 1970 se puede ver como un ejemplo extremo de la teoría del champ littéraire de Pierre Bourdieu.
- Vol. 7, Issue 1, 2023The works of Ana Rossetti and Clara Janés incorporate pastiche and diachronic referentiality in support of the deconstruction of a male-dominated hegemony with a strong tendency toward a mystical voice
- Vol. 7, Issue 1, 2023Common framing strategies in Estampa were the harmonization of femininity and feminism, the perception of feminism as threat, and the claims that the feminist goals had already been achieved.
- Vol. 7, Issue 1, 2023An analysis of the effects of the current urban development model based on neoliberal principles, and its consequences on collective identity and the environment through Miguel Brieva’s graphic work.
- Vol. 7, Issue 1, 2023Este artículo examina la idea de universalismo y la retórica del poder en los albores de la Sociedad de Naciones a través de José Plá Cárcenas.
- Vol. 7, Issue 1, 2023Analiza el desarrollo de identidad de la protagonista de El lunes nos querrán mientras ella le explica a su interlocutora la experiencia de ser una mujer marroquí-catalana en España.
- Vol. 7, Issue 1, 2023Se analiza A Lupita le gustaba planchar como novela de resistencia socialmente comprometida. Esquivel usa el género de la novela negra para examinar las transgresiones de la nación enferma.
- Vol. 7, Issue 1, 2023This diachronic study analyzes shifts in sociolinguistic factors affecting variation in the use of the discourse markers este and eh in the Spanish of Mexico City.