Academic literature on the topic 'Granada (Spain) in literature'

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Journal articles on the topic "Granada (Spain) in literature"

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Doğru, İhsan. "Yahya Kemal and Nizar Qabbani: Two Poet-Diplomats in Spain and “Andalus” in their Poems." CLEaR 4, no. 2 (2017): 20–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/clear-2017-0009.

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Abstract Yahya Kemal and Nizar Qabbani were two poets who served as diplomats in Spain in the past century on behalf of the governments of Turkey and Syria. Yahya Kemal wrote two poems about Spain, “Dance in Andalusia “ and “Coffee Shop in Madrid”. “Dance in Andalusia,” a poem written about the Flamenco dance, has become very famous. In this poem, he described the traditional dance of the Spanish people and emphasized the place of this dance in their lives and the fun-loving lives of the people of Spain. In almost all of the poems which Nizar Qabbani wrote about Spain, on the other hand, a feeling of sadness rather than joy prevails. He gives a deep sigh in his poems as he regards Andalusia as the one-time land of his ancestors. His most important poem with respect to Spain is the poem entitled “Granada”. This poem is considered to be one of the most significant odes in the Arab literature describing Granada, the pearl of Andalusia, Arab influences there, the Alhambra palace and the sadness felt due to the loss of the city by Arabs. This study analyzes the two most important poems written by Yahya Kemal and Nizar Qabbani concerning Spain, namely “Dance in Andalusia” and “Granada”. Whenever it is deemed appropriate, other poems of the two poets regarding Spain will be dwelt upon and what kind of an influence Andalusia left in their emotional world will be revealed.
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Litvak, Lily, and Candance Slater. "City Steeple, City Streets. Saints' Tales from Granada and a Changing Spain." Hispanic Review 61, no. 2 (1993): 294. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/473981.

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Gómez-Bolea, Antonio, Ana Rosa Burgaz, Violeta Atienza, et al. "Checklist of the lichens and lichenicolous fungi of Sierra Nevada (Spain)." Botanica Complutensis 45 (April 14, 2021): e74427. http://dx.doi.org/10.5209/bocm.74427.

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A checklist of lichens and lichenicolous fungi of Sierra Nevada (Granada, southeast Spain) is presented, fruit of the collecting field trip carried out by the Spanish Lichen Society (SEL), complemented with literature references. The authors identified 194 taxa (171 lichens and 23 lichenicolous fungi). As a result of these identifications, 46 lichens and nine lichenicolous fungi are reported for the first time in Sierra Nevada. To date, the catalogue includes 551 taxa (528 lichens and 23 lichenicolous fungi). We confirm both the scarce presence of terricolous lichens in the cryoromediterranean belt and the absence of alpine belt terricolous lichens.
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Weber, Alison. "Golden Age or Early Modern: What's in a Name?" PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 126, no. 1 (2011): 225–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/pmla.2011.126.1.225.

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As few hispanists have failed to notice, early modern Spain is more often appearing as an alternative term for what we used to call the Spanish Golden Age. University catalogs still advertise courses on Golden Age poetry, but lectures are more apt to bear titles such as “The Crisis of the Gift in Early Modern Spain.” Although some recent books—Inventing the Sacred: Imposture, Inquisition, and the Boundaries of the Supernatural in Golden Age Spain (Keitt), Honor and Violence in Golden Age Spain (Taylor), and An Erotic Philology of Golden Age Spain (Martín)—display Golden Age in their titles, they share shelf space with offerings such as The Drama of the Portrait: Theater and Visual Culture in Early Modern Spain (Bass), Imperial Lyric: New Poetry and New Subjects in Early Modern Spain (Middlebrook), and Family and Community in Early Modern Spain: The Citizens of Granada (Casey). The preference for early modern is showing up even in genres in which traditional usage might be expected. An anthology by Barbara Mujica, published in 1991, is subtitled Renacimiento y Siglo de Oro, but the cover of an anthology edited by her and published thirteen years later reads Sophia's Daughters: Women Writers of Early Modern Spain.
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CAMP, KATHRYN. "ANA ECHEVARRÍA, The Fortress of Faith: The Attitudes Towards Muslims in Fifteenth Century Spain, Medieval Iberian Peninsula, vol. 12 (Leiden, Boston, Cologne: E. J. Brill 1999). Pp. 254. $108 cloth." International Journal of Middle East Studies 33, no. 3 (2001): 450–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002074380122306x.

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In The Fortress of Faith: The Attitudes Towards Muslims in Fifteenth Century Spain, Ana Echevarría presents a study of four mid-15th-century texts and argues that their polemical tone toward the Muslim world was inspired by contemporary historical events and revealed a Christian Spain preparing itself to end Muslim rule on the Iberian Peninsula. She argues that the events of 1450–70 are key to understanding Fernando and Isabel's renewed march against Granada in 1474 and that ecclesiastical literature of this time—as a manifestation of a “frontier church”—can provide a glimpse of the ideas common at court and among the clergy. At the center of her book are the works of three theologians (Juan de Segovia, Alonso de Espina, and Juan de Torquemada) and one layman (the Aragonese Pedro de Cavallería)—all written between 1450 and 1461—and Echevarría juxtaposes these texts with a wide selection of similar treatises written in Spain and elsewhere since the Muslim invasion of Iberia in 711. For each of her four primary texts, she provides the historical context of the author's life as well as an analysis of each work's style, sources, symbolism, and mode of argumentation against Islam (which, in general, involved allegations about the illegitimacy of the Muslim Prophet, holy text, or tenets). She then compares the views of these authors with the legal norms governing interactions among Muslims, Christians, and Jews in 15th-century Spain and concludes that both reveal an “evolution towards intolerance and violence which was common to the society and its rulers” and that impelled the eventually successful conquest of Granada.
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Bhardwaj, Raj Kumar. "Information literacy literature in the social sciences and humanities: a bibliometric study." Information and Learning Science 118, no. 1/2 (2017): 67–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ils-09-2016-0068.

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Purpose This paper aims to map information literacy literature in social sciences and humanities published during the period of 2001-2012. Design/methodology/approach The data for the study are obtained from Scopus, accessible at www.scopus.com. Study used the Transformative Activity Index (TAI) and relative citation impact (RCI) to know the impact of most productive countries and prolific institutions. The SCImago Journal and Country Rank accessible at www.scimagojr.com/ was used to determine the SCImago Journal Rank and source normalized impact per paper. Findings The study found that 1990 documents originating from 79 countries were published in this study area. These papers are published in 160 journals with an average ∼12.51 papers per journal. These papers have been cited 10,025 times with ∼5.0. average citations per publication. Study also found that information literacy literature is published in 16 languages and the majority of the papers are in English, 1,879 (94.4 per cent). The highest growth of publications (106.7 per cent) was found in 2005. The USA contributed the highest number, 1,035 (52 per cent) papers. Moreover, of the 15 most productive countries, three recorded TAIs >100, and 12 countries recorded TAIs <100. In all, 160 institutions worldwide have contributed in information literacy research. Study also found that maximum literature published on the subject by a single author is 828 (41.6 per cent). Universidad de Granada, Granada, Spain has produced the highest number of papers (24, or 1.2 per cent) and received 61 (0.6 per cent) citations, while University of Strathclyde has the highest RCI (∼2.7) for its publications. Pintos, María from Universidad de Granada has published the maximum number of papers (18) that have been cited 78 times. Social implications The study endeavors to showcase information literacy research outcomes in social sciences and humanities. It involves quantitative analysis of the literature in this domain using bibliographic elements such as keywords, authors, affiliation, publication and citations. Originality/value No study has been conducted so far to map the information literacy literature in social sciences and humanities. Study will be useful in understanding the progress on information literacy in the area of social sciences and humanities. The study is significant for social scientists to foster further research in this emerging area.
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Ahsani, S. A. H. "The State of Research on Islamic Spain." American Journal of Islam and Society 9, no. 4 (1992): 556–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v9i4.2541.

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The era of Muslim rule in Spain (711-1491 CE) witnessed great contributionsin many areas of knowledge and learning. Rapid strides weremade in such diverse fields as art and architecture, agriculture and handicrafts,linguistics and literature, humanities and Social studies, music andpoetry, and the physical and mechanical sciences. In fact, Islamic Spain,known to the Muslim world as al Andalus, served as a bridge for thetransfer of the knowledge and wisdom of Classical Greece to Europe, aprocess that eventually led to the European Renaissance.The achievements of al Andalus will not be discussed in this paper.Rather, a survey of current research activities focusing on al Andaluswill be presented. The areas covered are Europe, North America, NorthAfrica, and parts of Asia. Latin American activities have not been surveyeddue to the nonavailability of sources.EuropeEurope has been the center of research on al Andalus. Various periodicalshave served as major sources of information: Al-Andalus (Madrid1933), Hesperis (Paris 1921-59), Hesperis-Tamuda (Rabat 1960), Miscellanceade Estudios Arabes y Hebraicos (Granda 1952), Revista de InstitutoEgypcio de Studios Islamicos (Madrid 1953), Revue de la OccidentMusulman et la Mediterranee (Aix-en-Provence 1966), Boletin de laAssociation Espaniola de Orientalistas (Madrid 1965), and Cuadernos dela Alhambra (Granada 1965).Certain important books have also appeared, such as Peres: la PoisieAndalousie, which includes a history of that period. Introductions to editionsof texts and translations relate important infonnation about al Andalusunder the al Murabitun and the al Mu’ahhidun dynasties. Hourani(1961) has written an excellent book: Averroes: On the Harmony of Religionand Philosophy. Memorial volumes in honor of E. Levi-Provencal,G. and W. Marcais, Menendes Pidal, Millas Vallicrosa y Parya, A. H. andR. Basset, H. A. R. Gibb and H. Wehr also contain much valuable data.Mention must be made of translations by institutes devoted to thestudy of al Andalus: Dar al Thaqafah (Beirut) has published valuablebooks, as have several Spanish and North African organizations (i.e.,Conjeyo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas Madrid], Instituto deStudios Islambs [Madrid], Institute des Haut-Etudes Marocaines Paris ...
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Valverde-Rodaa, José, Gema Gomez-Casero, Tomás López-Guzmán, and Miguel Jesús Medina-Viruel. "Motivational analysis of tourists who visit a city with inscriptions World Heritage Site, Granada, Spain." African Journal of Hospitality, Tourism and Leisure 10(1), no. 10(1) (2021): 349–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.46222/ajhtl.19770720-105.

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In recent times, it has been noticed that cultural tourism attracts millions of people. One interesting aspect is the analysis of WHS (World Heritage Site) destinations or cultural destinations that have an inscription WHS. This research has the goal of analysing the different groups of tourists who visit a cultural destination with an inscription WHS, specifically the city of Granada (Spain). For this, segmentation was performed, studying the socio-demographic profile of the tourists and their assessment of the attributes of this destination. For the tourist segmentation, two models have been followed. Four different groups of tourists were found: alternative, cultural, emotional and heritage. In this last one, the relationship between curiosity about the culture of the tourist destination and the heritage visited has a determining role. This study makes an important contribution to the literature regarding the links between the tourist and the historic and monumental heritage they visit and their tourist behaviour.
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García-Arenal, Mercedes. "The Religious Identity of the Arabic Language and the Affair of the Lead Books of the Sacromonte of Granada." Arabica 56, no. 6 (2009): 495–528. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/057053909x12544602282277.

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AbstractThis article deals, in the first place, with the religious identity of the Arabic language as defined by the ongoing debate, in 16th-17th century Spain, about its identification with Islam. Many new Christians of Muslim origin (Moriscos) tried to break this identification in an effort to salvage part of their culture, and specially the language, by separating it from Islam. I will argue that the Morisco forgery known as the Lead Books of the Sacromonte in Granada—an Arabic Evangile dictated by the Virgin Mary to Arabic disciples who came to Spain with the Apostle Saint James—was part of this effort. When the Lead Books were taken to the Vatican to be informed, they were studied by Maronite scholars who decided that they were written in “Muslim Arabic” and therefore could not be authentic Christian texts. The Maronites were engaged in creating and consolidating their own version of Christian Arabic to define and legitimise their own position inside the Roman world. The second part of the essay adresses the theological considerations and the defence of different cultural identities which are implied in these different versions of Arabic.
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Navarro, Francisco, Marilena Labianca, Eugenio Cejudo, et al. "Interpretations of Innovation in Rural Development. The Cases of Leader Projects in Lecce (Italy) and Granada (Spain) in 2007–2013 Period." European Countryside 10, no. 1 (2018): 107–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/euco-2018-0007.

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AbstractIn the Leader approach, innovation plays a key role in European territories, especially in marginal and peripheral ones, being essentially assumed, from a programmatic point of view, as social innovation. This paper aims to understand the interpretation and the declination of innovation in the practice of Leader initiative at local scale and analyze contextual factors related to its implementation in two southern provinces of Spain and Italy (Granada and Lecce). The study aims to analyze the projects reported as innovative by the leaders of the Local Action Groups, starting from the literature and using a key Community document entitled “Extended report on preserving the innovative character of LEADER”. Lastly, the study reveals common significant problems linked to local awareness of the role of social innovation, as well as the absence or limitations of key institutions.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Granada (Spain) in literature"

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Roelle, Jenna Rose. ""That romantic fortress" : British depictions of the Alhambra, 1815-1837 /." Thesis, Connect to title online (Scholars' Bank), 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/10025.

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Clark, Stewart John Peter. "A sedimentary record of orogenic uplift, Granada Basin, SE Spain." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 2004. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.411853.

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Hughes, John James. "Studies in sedimentary provenance of the intramontane Granada Basin, southern Spain." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 1995. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.297028.

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Hicks, Elisabeth. "Ambassadors of the Albayzín : Moroccan vendors of La Caldereria in Granada, Spain." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1534.

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The Lonely Planet advises visitors to Granada, Spain to "turn off...into the cobbled alleys of Calderería Vieja or Nueva and in a few steps you've left Europe behind." La Calderería is known for its Arab influences and North African immigrant businesses. A tourist's ability to easily step off one continent and enter another realm demonstrates an imagined border between Europe and the Orient, especially North Africa, that is created by historical narratives, policy discourses and daily practices. The antagonism between an imagined white, Catholic and European Spain vis-à-vis its North African Muslim neighbors is fundamental to the history of the Spanish nation. This East/West divide has recently been recast as Moroccan immigration, inspired by proximity and colonial legacies, since the 1980s has made Moroccan the largest immigrant group by nationality in Spain. Supranational borders, neighborhoods and specific streets participate in an intense debate about cultural difference, based on a complicated mixture of racial, ethnic and religious categories. Concurrently, more regional autonomy within the Spanish state has led Andalusia to reclaim its Islamic heritage, especially in Granada where tourism is important economically. This has dovetailed with gentrification of the Albayzín. Both the appropriation of the Islamic period of Iberian history and the contemporary social exclusion of Moroccan immigrants are realized through Orientalism. In La Calderería, tea, souvenirs, male Moroccan vendors, Western female tourists, pavement, cultural conservation, public space ordinances and police surveillance create a site where public and private space blurs and ‘practical orientalism’ constitutes subjects performing and resisting the identities prescribed to them.
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Ones, Synnøve. "The politics of government in the Audiencia of New Granada, 1681-1719." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2000. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/2579/.

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This is a study of government and governance in the Audiencia of Santa Fe during the last two decades of Habsburg rule and the first two decades of Bourbon rule, a period largely neglected by historians of New Granada and of Spanish America in general. However, it is not simply an administrative history. Rather than focus primarily on the structure of government and formal mechanisms of power and authority, this study aims, as the title indicates, to examine the political activity contained within the formal structure of institutions and laws. It looks at the ways in which institutions of government actually functioned within the society they were designed to govern and control, in other words the workings of government. These are themes which have been little studied by historians of the region, despite the importance which has been attached to the colonial state as a force which played a primary role in shaping New Granada's history. Studies of the colonial state have tended to portray it as a hierarchy of institutions, closely controlled from the centre, which developed as Spain's monarchs sought to legitimise their dominion and impose their control over the vast territories of the Americas. They have presented royal institutions of government in the Indies, the audiencia and provincial governors in the case of New Granada as the tools of an absolutist monarchy, employed by the Spanish crown to expand royal power over Spanish American subjects. The present study thus aims to challenge this picture by making detailed reference to contemporary documentation and taking into account recent research on early modern government and governance in areas outside New Granada. We will attempt to show that government in the Audiencia of Santa Fe was not a rigid structure but very political in nature.
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Soulodre-La, France Renée. "An ambivalent embrace region and reform in New Granada : the case of Tolima Grande /." Diss., Connect to a 24 p. preview or request complete full text in PDF format. Access restricted to UC campuses, 1999. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/ucsd/fullcit?p9917957.

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Finlay, Robin Neil. "The 'Orient' in the 'Occident' : the social, cultural and spatial dynamics of Moroccan diaspora formations in Granada, Spain." Thesis, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10443/3372.

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Contributing to research on geographies of diasporas and migration, this thesis examines how the Moroccan diaspora in the city of Granada, Spain, has transformed urban space, and conversely, how the spatiality of Granada engenders distinctive diasporic identity formations, senses of belonging and spatial practices. Using the geographical insight that diasporas alter and are altered by the places they inhabit and that identities and belongings are often spatialised and spatially contingent, the research examines how these processes function for the Moroccan diaspora living in Granada. Granada’s mixed Christian and Islamic heritage, its relatively recent transformation from an ethnically homogenous space into a diaspora space, and the close proximity of the Maghreb and Africa, all herald Granada as a rich arena to explore social, cultural and spatial processes of diasporas and migration. Conceptually, the research is positioned within urban geographies of diasporas. The centrality of the urban spatial scale in diaspora formations and experiences, rather than the national, is demonstrated and examined. The thesis focuses on four concepts that are at the core of geographies of diasporas: space, belonging, home and identity. Drawing on eight months of ethnographic fieldwork, the thesis provides an empirical analysis that is grounded in the everyday and intimate spaces of the Moroccan diaspora. As such it responds to calls for grounded studies on diasporas that take locations and their contexts seriously. Overall, the thesis underlines the fundamental centrality of place for diaspora formations, and argues that the experiences and perceptions of the Moroccan diaspora in Granada provide distinctive narratives of European urban diversity.
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Lix, Claire. "Present-day fluid-rock interaction in a sedimentary basin : study case of the Granada Basin (Betic Cordillera, Spain)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2019. https://accesdistant.sorbonne-universite.fr/login?url=https://theses-intra.sorbonne-universite.fr/2019SORUS200.pdf.

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Comprendre les circulations des fluides dans les bassins sédimentaires joue un rôle crucial dans les divers domaines des ressources naturelles. Dans cette thèse, une approche géochimique est développée pour caractériser la géochimie des eaux souterraines actuelles et pour étudier les réactions affectant un système sédimentaire, en prenant le bassin de Grenade comme cas d'étude. La composition isotopique de l'hélium des gaz libres et dissous a été étudiée afin de contraindre la structure lithosphérique de la région. La composition isotopique de He montre une composante radiogénique dominante avec une contribution mantellique atteignant 1 %. L'évaluation des mécanismes de transport de l'He montre que la croûte est actuellement dissociée du manteau. Nous proposons donc que l’He mantellique observé pourrait résulter d’une contribution fossile du manteau associée à une production crustale à partir de roches riches en Li. Les interactions eau-roche dans les Cordillères Bétiques ont été étudiées en caractérisant les systèmes géothermaux de faible et moyenne enthalpie. Cette étude montre une relation étroite entre la température et la pCO2 dans le réservoir et met en évidence le rôle des tampons minéraux du remplissage sédimentaire et du socle sur la réactivité du CO2. L’étude plus approfondie de la réactivité dans le bassin de Grenade permet de mieux comprendre les écoulements à l’échelle de l’ensemble du bassin. L'évolution de la saturation des eaux vis-à-vis des carbonates, des alumino-silicates et des sulfates permet d'évaluer les chemins possibles d’écoulement dans le bassin et d'appréhender un modèle conceptuel de transport réactif<br>Understanding fluid circulations in sedimentary basins plays a critical role in the diverse fields of energy and natural resources. In this thesis, a geochemical approach is developed to characterize the present-day groundwater geochemistry and to investigate the reactions affecting a sedimentary system, taking the Granada Basin as a regional study case. Helium isotopic composition of bubbling and dissolved gases has been investigated to set constrains on the lithospheric structure of the area. We found that the He isotopic composition has a dominant radiogenic component with a mantle-derived He contribution reaching mainly 1 %. The evaluation of helium transport mechanisms shows that the crustal system is currently dissociated from the mantle system. We therefore propose that the observed mantle-derived He could result from fossil mantle contribution associated to crustal production from Li-rich rocks. Water-rock interactions in the Central Betic Cordillera have been investigated by characterizing the low- to medium-enthalpy thermal systems. This study, combining geothermometrical methods, shows a strong relationship between the temperature and the pCO2 in the reservoir and highlights the role of the potential mineral buffers of both the sedimentary infilling and the basement on the reactivity of CO2. Further investigations on the reactivity within the Granada Basin allow us to give insights on the groundwater flows at the scale of the whole basin. The evolution of the groundwater saturation with respect to carbonates, alumino-silicates, and sulfates allows to assess the possible flow paths in the basin and to apprehend a conceptual reactive transport model
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Lopez, John-David. "The British Romantic reconstruction of Spain." Diss., Restricted to subscribing institutions, 2008. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1692097271&sid=19&Fmt=2&clientId=1564&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, Los Angeles, 2008.<br>Vita. Individual works cited are included for each chapter and are noted in the table of contents. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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Gravatt, Michelle Leroux Domínguez Frank. "The arenga in the literature of medieval Spain." Chapel Hill, N.C. : University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2007. http://dc.lib.unc.edu/u?/etd,812.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2007.<br>Title from electronic title page (viewed Dec. 18, 2007). "... in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Romance Languages (Spanish)." Discipline: Romance Languages; Department/School: Romance Languages.
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Books on the topic "Granada (Spain) in literature"

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Burín, Antonio Gallego y. La Granada de Antonio Gallego Burín: Antología. Universidad de Granada, 1995.

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Almendros, Rogelio Bustos. La dama de la Alhambra. Método Ediciones, 1996.

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Pérez, Andrés Pociña. Galicia e Granada: Dous cabos dun eixo espiritual. Ediciós do Castro, 1998.

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Barrio, José M. La imagen de la Alhambra y el Generalife en la cultura anglosajona (1620-1920). Patronato de la Alhambra y Generalife, 2014.

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Rosales, José Carlos. Memoria poética de la Alhambra: Antología. Fundación José Manuel Lara, 2011.

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Rosales, José Carlos. Memoria poética de la Alhambra: Antología. Fundación José Manuel Lara, 2011.

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T, Tibi Amin, ред. The Tibyān: Memoirs of ʻAbd Allāh b. Buluggīn, last Zīrid Ambīr of Granada. E. J. Brill, 1986.

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Federico García Lorca y el grupo de la revista "Gallo": La vanguardia literaria en la Granada de los años veinte. Diputación Provincial de Granada, 2012.

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Entrala, José Luis. Granada sitiada, 1936-1939. Editorial Comares, 1996.

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William, Granara, ed. Granada: A novel. Syracuse University Press, 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "Granada (Spain) in literature"

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Hitchcock, Richard. "The Conquest of Granada in Nineteenth-Century English and American Historiography." In Medieval Spain. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781403919779_13.

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Jiménez, Manuel González. "Peace and War on the Frontier of Granada. Jaén and the Truce of 1476." In Medieval Spain. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781403919779_8.

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Thomson, Guy. "The Revolution of September 1868 in Western Granada." In The Birth of Modern Politics in Spain. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230248564_13.

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Thomson, Guy. "Ballots, Conspiracies and Insurrection in Málaga and Granada, 1857–1859." In The Birth of Modern Politics in Spain. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230248564_4.

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Perojo Arronte, María Eugenia. "Coleridge and Spanish Literature." In Spain in British Romanticism. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64456-1_6.

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Luttikhuizen, Frances. "Clandestine Protestant Literature Reaches Spain." In Protestant Majorities and Minorities in Early Modern Europe. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.13109/9783666571299.129.

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Garrido, Alberto, M. Ramón Llamas, Consuelo Varela-Ortega, Paula Novo, Roberto Rodríguez-Casado, and Maite M. Aldaya. "Literature Review." In Water Footprint and Virtual Water Trade in Spain. Springer New York, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-5741-2_2.

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Thomson, Guy. "‘The Second Loja’: Garibaldi and the Limits of Democracy in Eastern Granada, 1863–1864." In The Birth of Modern Politics in Spain. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230248564_11.

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Terry, Arthur. "War and Literature in Sixteenth-Century Spain." In War, Literature and the Arts in Sixteenth-Century Europe. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-19734-7_6.

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Matarán Ruiz, Alberto, and Carolina Yacamán Ochoa. "Participative Agri-Food Projects in the Urban Bioregion of the Vega of Granada (Spain)." In Bioregional Planning and Design: Volume II. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-46083-9_6.

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Conference papers on the topic "Granada (Spain) in literature"

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Navarro Luengo, Ildefonso, Adrián Suárez Bedmar, and Pedro Martín Parrado. "El castillo de San Luis (Estepona Málaga): Origen y evolución de una fortificación abaluartada. Siglos XVI-XXI." In FORTMED2020 - Defensive Architecture of the Mediterranean. Universitat Politàcnica de València, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/fortmed2020.2020.11552.

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The castle of San Luis (Estepona Málaga): Origin and evolution of a bastion fort. Sixteenth to twenty-first centuriesThe results of the investigation prior to the excavation work in the Castle of San Luis, in Estepona (Málaga, Spain) are presented. It is a coastal fortress built in the last quarter of the sixteenth century, in the context of the reorganisation of the defense of the western coast of Malaga after the Moorish rebellion of 1568. After analysing the available literature, we propose that it was designed by the Engineer Juan Ambrosio Malgrá, Maestro Mayor de obras del Reino de Granada. The Castle of San Luis is devised as an add-on construction on the southern front of the walls of Islamic origin, dominating the natural anchorage of the Rada beach. Its most prominent elements are three bastions, two of them with casemates, and a large main square. However, various defects in the design and execution of the works, added to the insufficient provision of artillery and garrison, affected the effectiveness of the fortification throughout its history. In the middle of the eighteenth century, part of the Castle of San Luis is restructured as a cannons’ battery. Following the damage caused by the Lisbon Earthquake, in 1755, and by the French and English blastings in 1812, during the second half of the nineteenth century much of the castle disappears, leaving only the cannons’ battery, which is incorporated as a courtyard in height as an add-on to a house built at the end of the nineteenth century. At present, after several decades of abandonment, excavation works have been undertaken on the remains of the battery, after which the site will be prepared to be used as a museum.
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Salinas Extremera, Alfonso, Jesus Fornieles Callejon, Sergio Toledo Redondo, et al. "Teaching electromagnetic subject in electrical engineering degree at University of Granada (Spain)." In 2011 Promotion and Innovation with New Technologies in Engineering Education (FINTDI 2011). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/fintdi.2011.5948895.

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GRINDLAY, ALEJANDRO L., GABRIELA OCHOA-COVARRUBIAS, and CARMEN LIZÁRRAGA. "URBAN MOBILITY AND QUALITY OF PUBLIC SPACES: THE CASE OF GRANADA, SPAIN." In URBAN TRANSPORT 2020. WIT Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/ut200041.

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Rodríguez-Pérez, Celia. "ONLINE TEACHING DURING THE LOCKDOWN: AN EXPERIENCE FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF GRANADA (SPAIN)." In 13th annual International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation. IATED, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/iceri.2020.1149.

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Benjumea, B., B. Gaite, Z. Spica, F. Bohoyo, M. Schimmel, and S. Ruiz-Barajas. "DAS dataset analysis for reflection imaging with ambient noise in urban areas: Granada, Spain." In NSG2021 2nd Conference on Geophysics for Infrastructure Planning, Monitoring and BIM. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.202120147.

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Terán Yépez, Eduardo Fernando. "STATE-OF-THE-ART ENTREPRENEURSHIP THEORIES: A CRITICAL REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE." In IISES Annual Conference, Sevilla, Spain. International Institute of Social and Economic Sciences, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.20472/iac.2018.035.043.

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Ruiz-Magaña, María José, Verónica Ayllon, Verónica Neubrand, et al. "A SWOT ANALYSIS OF THE AVAILABLE ON-LINE EVALUATION TOOLS AT UNIVERSITY OF GRANADA (SPAIN)." In 13th International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies. IATED, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/edulearn.2021.1198.

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"Teaching Portuguese Language and Literature to a New Generation: the Challenges of Artificial Intelligence." In Feb. 11-13, 2020 Barcelona (Spain). Universal Researchers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.17758/uruae10.uh0220414.

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A. Martin Sánchez, D., J. Diaz Curiel, A. Maldonado, and N. Caparrini. "Control network (/T for the investigation of the marine intrusion in Castell de Ferro (Granada, Spain)." In 4th EEGS Meeting. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201407089.

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Zamorano, M., J. Arán, A. Ramos, and M. L. Rodríguez. "A multicriteria space model to locate grid-connected photovoltaic power plants in Granada (Spain), case study." In ENERGY AND SUSTAINABILITY 2009. WIT Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/esu090021.

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Reports on the topic "Granada (Spain) in literature"

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Rodriguez Rodriguez, Jorge Miguel. Gómez Alfaro: Pioneer of Interdisciplinary Studies on the Relationships Between Journalism and Literature in Spain. Revista Latina de Comunicación Social, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4185/rlcs-65-2010-885-089-098-en.

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