Abstrakt: |
The presence of Fernando Pessoa in Spain in the 1940s, after the Civil War, provides an interesting research area to understand the relations between the Portuguese and Spanish literatures of that time. In a moment marked by the new social and political reality of the postwar period, with a pervasive official and officialist culture, the reception of the author of the heteronyms by writers and intellectuals such as José García Nieto, Gerardo Diego or Joaquín de Entrambasaguas—through the relationship developed between Eugenio Montes and António Ferro—defines a landmark in the literary and cultural relations between the two major Iberian literatures, which should now be revisited in the light of new elements of analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |