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Journal Articles and Book Chapters by Eva Darias-Beautell

Research paper thumbnail of A Deluge of Affects: Critical Encounters in The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open

International Journal of English Studies, 2023

This article examines Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers and Kathleen Hepburn's film The Body Remembers When... more This article examines Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers and Kathleen Hepburn's film The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open (2019) through the lens of materialist and feminist affect theories as they intersect with critical Indigeneity. It investigates how the film produces two parallel and conflicting reactions in the viewer, for whom "ugly feelings" (Ngai, 2007), such as failure, embarrassment, pity or shame, compete with an overwhelming and often frustrated need for empathy and compassion.

Research paper thumbnail of Emergency contact: Compassion and precarious love in Michael Christie’s The Beggar’s Garden

The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, 2021

This article examines the relation between affect and agency in Michael Christie’s short story co... more This article examines the relation between affect and agency in Michael Christie’s short story collection The Beggar’s Garden (2011). It builds its argument on recent philosophical discussions about the oxymoronic nature of the relational subject. Many contemporary thinkers have emphasized the fundamental paradox that affective relations are as necessary as they are profoundly destabilizing of the subject’s supposed autonomy. Following this train of thought, a number of studies have appeared that explore the relation between vulnerability and agency. Would a focus on affective relations and the subsequently increased sense of vulnerability produce or foreclose action? The article takes this question to the field of the literary to provide a critical reading of the first two stories in Christie’s collection, “Emergency Contact” and “Discard”, both of which probe, in very different ways, the power of affect in the midst of highly precarious material conditions. Drawing on the work of ...

Research paper thumbnail of "The Fetishized Subject Modes of Resilience in Madeleine Thien's Certainty"

Glocal Narratives of Resilience. Ed. Ana Mª Fraile-Marcos. Routledge. ISBN 9780367261337, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Who said "vulnerable'? Literature, Canada, precarity, affect.

Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 2019

This article draws on Judith Butler’s notions of vulnerability and precarity to propose an approa... more This article draws on Judith Butler’s notions of vulnerability and precarity
to propose an approach to the study of contemporary Canadian
literature that is both aesthetically and politically involved. In recent
work, Butler implies the possibility of engaging, through the field of
literature and critical theory, with the production of vulnerability at the
heart of human crises. If that is so, it is crucial to emphasize the role of
postcolonial literatures in tackling contemporary forms of violence and
revealing the normative frames that empower those forms. The article
argues for the usefulness of critically reading Canadian literature in
those terms, if only as a response to the large number of texts that
narrate and engage the multiple sites of human vulnerability, implicitly
calling for a mode of analysis that draws attention back to the political
potential of the aesthetic, and endorsing what could be thought of as
a post-post-structuralist moment.

Research paper thumbnail of INTRODUCTION. The Urban Condition Literary Trajectories through Canada's Postmetropolis Eva Darias-Beautell Series in Literary Studies

Research paper thumbnail of The Softness of Theory: A T(r)opological Reading of Lisa Robertson’s Soft Architecture.

Mosaic, an interdisciplinary critical journal Volume 49, Number 4, December 2016

Research paper thumbnail of "The Unresolved Spaces of Diasporic Desire: An Interdisciplinary Critique of Haruko Okano’s Work." ATLANTIS Journal of the Spanish Association of Anglo-American Studies 36.2 (December 2014): 183-201 issn 0210-6124

Th is article explores, through the analysis of recent Asian Canadian critical and creative work,... more Th is article explores, through the analysis of recent Asian Canadian critical and creative work, the unresolved nature of diasporic modes of cultural production in contemporary Canada. It starts by off ering a metacritical discussion of Asian Canadian literary scholarship, with a focus on those works that defi ne the fi eld in terms of the quandary between resistance to various modes of cooption and the residual desire to belong. Th e second part of the article proposes an interdisciplinary critique of the poet and multimedia artist Haruko Okano's work as providing an instance of these contradictions, as well as exemplifying the potential of creative practices to provide answers to critical and theoretical impasses. Okano's disconcerting writing and artwork have invariably revolved around the unresolved condition of cultural hybridity, oft en betraying the traps as well as the possibilities of the search for modes of expression that fall outside normativity. Her production may thus be read metacritically, in that it thematizes and speaks to the theoretical debates that surround the condition of the diasporic subject in Canada.

Research paper thumbnail of "The Intrinsic Potential of Glassness: Narcissistic, Opaque, Organic Modes of Signifying the Urban in Vancouver.”

Literature and the Glocal City: Reshaping the English Canadian Imaginary. Ed. Ana María Fraile Marcos. Routledge., 2014

Research paper thumbnail of “Haunted/Wanted in Jen Sookfong Lee’s The End of East: Canada’s Cultural Memory Beyond Nostalgia.” Canadian Literature and Cultural Memory. Ed. Cynthia Sugars and Eleanor Ty. Toronto: Oxford UP.

In Specters of Marx, a work that strives to bring the spirit of Marxism back into the political a... more In Specters of Marx, a work that strives to bring the spirit of Marxism back into the political and ideological arena, Jacques Derrida talks about a notion of hauntology that may "replace" ontology in that it defi nes a process of return of suppressed knowledge (hence the tropes of spectres/ghosts) that constantly suspends ontological certainties (10). Hauntology is tied to memory and historicity, on one end, and to a notion of future justice, on the other, for the project involves the recognition of a politics of memory that can eff ect social and historical transformation. Here Derrida brings forth "the messianic" to express a radical possibility and an openness towards the future: "an alterity that cannot be anticipated. Awaiting without horizon of the wait, awaiting what one does not expect yet or any longer, hospitality without reserve, welcoming salutation accorded in advance to the absolute surprise of the arrivant" (65). As a politically meaningful project, the messianic's potential power stems from the in-between spaces between Self and Other, opening a "horizon of transformation, the horizon of diff erance, the horizon of catachresis as a hitherto unexplored possibility" (Lai 499). It is this allusion to the terrain of the "not yet" that marks, I believe, the full potential of the spectral trope for the analysis of literature and cultural memory.

Research paper thumbnail of The Production of Vancouver: Termination Views in the City of Glass. Unruly Penelopes and the Ghosts: Narratives of English Canada. WLUP, 2012.

Research paper thumbnail of Why Penelopes? How Unruly? Which Ghosts? Narratives of English Canada. Introduction. Unruly Penelopes and the Ghosts: Narratives of English Canada. WLUP, 2012.

Research paper thumbnail of Trans.Through.Beyond (A Review Essay of Transnational Poetics: Asian Canadian Women’s Fiction in the 1990s)

Research paper thumbnail of "An Isochronic Order for Canadian Culture? Transing the Canadian Mosaic.” A review essay of  The Canadian Mosaic in the Age of Transnationalism. Ed. Ernst, Jutta and Brigitte Glaser. Canadian Review of Comparative Literature 40.2 (June): 243-250

Research paper thumbnail of "A Descent into Local Splendour?: Cultural Exposure in Timothy Taylor’s Stanley Park."Canada Exposed/Le Canada à Decouvert. Ed. Pierre Anctil et al. Bruxelles: Peter Lang, 2009.  297-314. ISBN: 978-90-5201-5201-548-4.

Research paper thumbnail of "Home Truths: Teaching Canadian Literatures in Spanish Universities."Made in Canada, Read in Spain: Essays on the Translation and Circulation of English-Canadian Literature. Ed. Pilar Somacarrera.London: Versita. 164-179. ISBN: 978-83-7656-017-5.

Research paper thumbnail of "Who's Afraid of the Urban? Canadian Literature Goes Downtown."Canadian Studies: The State of the Art / Études canadiennes: Questions de recherché (30 Years of ICCS / Les 30 ans du CIEC). Ed. K-D. Ertler, S. Gill, S. Hodgett, P. James. Frankfurt: Peter Lang. 341-361. ISBN 978-3-631-61599-7.

Research paper thumbnail of In Search of New Metaphors: An Interview with Linda Hutcheon.REVISTA CANARIA DE ESTUDIOS INGLESES, 43; noviembre 2001, pp. 179-189

Research paper thumbnail of Where Has ‘Real’ Nature Gone, Anyway? Ecocriticism, Canadian Writing and the Lures of the Virtual. Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses 56 (Spring): 81-98.

Research paper thumbnail of Blood Road Leads to Promise: A Gendered Approach to Canada’s Past in Gail Anderson-Dargatz’s The Cure for Death by Lightning

Canon Disorders: Gendered Perspectives on Literature and Film in Canada and the United States. Ed. Eva Darias Beautell and María Jesús Hernáez Lerena (Universidad de La Laguna/ Universidad de La Rioja). 34-68. ISBN: 978-84-96487-17-8., 2007

Research paper thumbnail of THE INNER GEOGRAPHY OF HOME': THE ECOFEMINIST ETHICS OF DAPHNE MARLATT'S TAKEN»1Feminismo/s 5 (Junio 2005). 177-195.

To touch beyond the window the very texture of the place, soak in its smells, its sounds. This ha... more To touch beyond the window the very texture of the place, soak in its smells, its sounds. This happened without question.

Research paper thumbnail of A Deluge of Affects: Critical Encounters in The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open

International Journal of English Studies, 2023

This article examines Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers and Kathleen Hepburn's film The Body Remembers When... more This article examines Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers and Kathleen Hepburn's film The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open (2019) through the lens of materialist and feminist affect theories as they intersect with critical Indigeneity. It investigates how the film produces two parallel and conflicting reactions in the viewer, for whom "ugly feelings" (Ngai, 2007), such as failure, embarrassment, pity or shame, compete with an overwhelming and often frustrated need for empathy and compassion.

Research paper thumbnail of Emergency contact: Compassion and precarious love in Michael Christie’s The Beggar’s Garden

The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, 2021

This article examines the relation between affect and agency in Michael Christie’s short story co... more This article examines the relation between affect and agency in Michael Christie’s short story collection The Beggar’s Garden (2011). It builds its argument on recent philosophical discussions about the oxymoronic nature of the relational subject. Many contemporary thinkers have emphasized the fundamental paradox that affective relations are as necessary as they are profoundly destabilizing of the subject’s supposed autonomy. Following this train of thought, a number of studies have appeared that explore the relation between vulnerability and agency. Would a focus on affective relations and the subsequently increased sense of vulnerability produce or foreclose action? The article takes this question to the field of the literary to provide a critical reading of the first two stories in Christie’s collection, “Emergency Contact” and “Discard”, both of which probe, in very different ways, the power of affect in the midst of highly precarious material conditions. Drawing on the work of ...

Research paper thumbnail of "The Fetishized Subject Modes of Resilience in Madeleine Thien's Certainty"

Glocal Narratives of Resilience. Ed. Ana Mª Fraile-Marcos. Routledge. ISBN 9780367261337, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of Who said "vulnerable'? Literature, Canada, precarity, affect.

Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 2019

This article draws on Judith Butler’s notions of vulnerability and precarity to propose an approa... more This article draws on Judith Butler’s notions of vulnerability and precarity
to propose an approach to the study of contemporary Canadian
literature that is both aesthetically and politically involved. In recent
work, Butler implies the possibility of engaging, through the field of
literature and critical theory, with the production of vulnerability at the
heart of human crises. If that is so, it is crucial to emphasize the role of
postcolonial literatures in tackling contemporary forms of violence and
revealing the normative frames that empower those forms. The article
argues for the usefulness of critically reading Canadian literature in
those terms, if only as a response to the large number of texts that
narrate and engage the multiple sites of human vulnerability, implicitly
calling for a mode of analysis that draws attention back to the political
potential of the aesthetic, and endorsing what could be thought of as
a post-post-structuralist moment.

Research paper thumbnail of INTRODUCTION. The Urban Condition Literary Trajectories through Canada's Postmetropolis Eva Darias-Beautell Series in Literary Studies

Research paper thumbnail of The Softness of Theory: A T(r)opological Reading of Lisa Robertson’s Soft Architecture.

Mosaic, an interdisciplinary critical journal Volume 49, Number 4, December 2016

Research paper thumbnail of "The Unresolved Spaces of Diasporic Desire: An Interdisciplinary Critique of Haruko Okano’s Work." ATLANTIS Journal of the Spanish Association of Anglo-American Studies 36.2 (December 2014): 183-201 issn 0210-6124

Th is article explores, through the analysis of recent Asian Canadian critical and creative work,... more Th is article explores, through the analysis of recent Asian Canadian critical and creative work, the unresolved nature of diasporic modes of cultural production in contemporary Canada. It starts by off ering a metacritical discussion of Asian Canadian literary scholarship, with a focus on those works that defi ne the fi eld in terms of the quandary between resistance to various modes of cooption and the residual desire to belong. Th e second part of the article proposes an interdisciplinary critique of the poet and multimedia artist Haruko Okano's work as providing an instance of these contradictions, as well as exemplifying the potential of creative practices to provide answers to critical and theoretical impasses. Okano's disconcerting writing and artwork have invariably revolved around the unresolved condition of cultural hybridity, oft en betraying the traps as well as the possibilities of the search for modes of expression that fall outside normativity. Her production may thus be read metacritically, in that it thematizes and speaks to the theoretical debates that surround the condition of the diasporic subject in Canada.

Research paper thumbnail of "The Intrinsic Potential of Glassness: Narcissistic, Opaque, Organic Modes of Signifying the Urban in Vancouver.”

Literature and the Glocal City: Reshaping the English Canadian Imaginary. Ed. Ana María Fraile Marcos. Routledge., 2014

Research paper thumbnail of “Haunted/Wanted in Jen Sookfong Lee’s The End of East: Canada’s Cultural Memory Beyond Nostalgia.” Canadian Literature and Cultural Memory. Ed. Cynthia Sugars and Eleanor Ty. Toronto: Oxford UP.

In Specters of Marx, a work that strives to bring the spirit of Marxism back into the political a... more In Specters of Marx, a work that strives to bring the spirit of Marxism back into the political and ideological arena, Jacques Derrida talks about a notion of hauntology that may "replace" ontology in that it defi nes a process of return of suppressed knowledge (hence the tropes of spectres/ghosts) that constantly suspends ontological certainties (10). Hauntology is tied to memory and historicity, on one end, and to a notion of future justice, on the other, for the project involves the recognition of a politics of memory that can eff ect social and historical transformation. Here Derrida brings forth "the messianic" to express a radical possibility and an openness towards the future: "an alterity that cannot be anticipated. Awaiting without horizon of the wait, awaiting what one does not expect yet or any longer, hospitality without reserve, welcoming salutation accorded in advance to the absolute surprise of the arrivant" (65). As a politically meaningful project, the messianic's potential power stems from the in-between spaces between Self and Other, opening a "horizon of transformation, the horizon of diff erance, the horizon of catachresis as a hitherto unexplored possibility" (Lai 499). It is this allusion to the terrain of the "not yet" that marks, I believe, the full potential of the spectral trope for the analysis of literature and cultural memory.

Research paper thumbnail of The Production of Vancouver: Termination Views in the City of Glass. Unruly Penelopes and the Ghosts: Narratives of English Canada. WLUP, 2012.

Research paper thumbnail of Why Penelopes? How Unruly? Which Ghosts? Narratives of English Canada. Introduction. Unruly Penelopes and the Ghosts: Narratives of English Canada. WLUP, 2012.

Research paper thumbnail of Trans.Through.Beyond (A Review Essay of Transnational Poetics: Asian Canadian Women’s Fiction in the 1990s)

Research paper thumbnail of "An Isochronic Order for Canadian Culture? Transing the Canadian Mosaic.” A review essay of  The Canadian Mosaic in the Age of Transnationalism. Ed. Ernst, Jutta and Brigitte Glaser. Canadian Review of Comparative Literature 40.2 (June): 243-250

Research paper thumbnail of "A Descent into Local Splendour?: Cultural Exposure in Timothy Taylor’s Stanley Park."Canada Exposed/Le Canada à Decouvert. Ed. Pierre Anctil et al. Bruxelles: Peter Lang, 2009.  297-314. ISBN: 978-90-5201-5201-548-4.

Research paper thumbnail of "Home Truths: Teaching Canadian Literatures in Spanish Universities."Made in Canada, Read in Spain: Essays on the Translation and Circulation of English-Canadian Literature. Ed. Pilar Somacarrera.London: Versita. 164-179. ISBN: 978-83-7656-017-5.

Research paper thumbnail of "Who's Afraid of the Urban? Canadian Literature Goes Downtown."Canadian Studies: The State of the Art / Études canadiennes: Questions de recherché (30 Years of ICCS / Les 30 ans du CIEC). Ed. K-D. Ertler, S. Gill, S. Hodgett, P. James. Frankfurt: Peter Lang. 341-361. ISBN 978-3-631-61599-7.

Research paper thumbnail of In Search of New Metaphors: An Interview with Linda Hutcheon.REVISTA CANARIA DE ESTUDIOS INGLESES, 43; noviembre 2001, pp. 179-189

Research paper thumbnail of Where Has ‘Real’ Nature Gone, Anyway? Ecocriticism, Canadian Writing and the Lures of the Virtual. Revista Canaria de Estudios Ingleses 56 (Spring): 81-98.

Research paper thumbnail of Blood Road Leads to Promise: A Gendered Approach to Canada’s Past in Gail Anderson-Dargatz’s The Cure for Death by Lightning

Canon Disorders: Gendered Perspectives on Literature and Film in Canada and the United States. Ed. Eva Darias Beautell and María Jesús Hernáez Lerena (Universidad de La Laguna/ Universidad de La Rioja). 34-68. ISBN: 978-84-96487-17-8., 2007

Research paper thumbnail of THE INNER GEOGRAPHY OF HOME': THE ECOFEMINIST ETHICS OF DAPHNE MARLATT'S TAKEN»1Feminismo/s 5 (Junio 2005). 177-195.

To touch beyond the window the very texture of the place, soak in its smells, its sounds. This ha... more To touch beyond the window the very texture of the place, soak in its smells, its sounds. This happened without question.

Research paper thumbnail of CFP: Writing the 'Good Life' in Narratives of Canada

Canda and Beyond: A Journal of Literary and Cultural Studies, 2024

In her book The Promise of Happiness (2010), Sara Ahmed explains how the concept of happiness is ... more In her book The Promise of Happiness (2010), Sara Ahmed explains how the concept of happiness is related to heteronormative notions of the "good life": "The good life is the life that is lived in the right way, by doing the right things, over and over again" (Ahmed 2010, 36). Questioning the promise of a good life leads to unhappiness, but unhappiness (unlike happiness) can be productive for social change as it fosters a possibility to open to new affective spaces in the subject's life. Ahmed describes individuals' urges toward "the good life" as frequently grounded in attachments that, while often toxic and ultimately unfulfilling, are not recognized as such by the people who engage in these negative relations. Those feelings derive from the impossible emotional fantasy of living a good life-an emotional state that Lauren Berlant aptly defined as "cruel optimism," a situation in which what people most desire is actually an obstacle to their flourishing. The cruelty comes from the fact that people tend to depend on "objects that block the very thriving that motivates our attachment in the first place" (Berlant 2012). Both notions of the good life and cruel optimism are connected to Kathleen Stewart's "ordinary affects," a "kind of contact zone where the over-determinations of circulations, events, conditions, technologies, and flows of power take place" (2007, 3). For Stewart, ordinary affects happen through unexpected events which may be shocking, perturbing, traumatic, or even funny, but which offer individuals the opportunity to move forward. The ordinary and the unexpected can merge to transform individuals' lives and allow them to form new connections (2007, 95). In both Berlant's and Stewart's thinking, the unexpected has the power to redefine individuals' inner landscapes and their perceptions of self-both of which are structured by a lifelong dynamic of intimate relationships and attachments. The guest editors seek articles that analyze narratives of Canada that unravel the notions of the good life (Ahmed), and/or cruel optimism (Berlant), and/or ordinary affects and the unexpected (Stewart). Contributors are encouraged to examine how these notions articulate new places of critical potential in narratives of Canada.

Research paper thumbnail of CFP: Early Career Researchers' Perspectives on the Literatures and Cultures of Canada/Turtle Island (Deadline: October 31 2021)

Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies (Issue 11, 2022), 2022

Literary and Cultural Studies has recently joined the University of Salamanca publishing program,... more Literary and Cultural Studies has recently joined the University of Salamanca publishing program, and to celebrate this event and recognize the contributions of new scholars working in the field, the journal invites new submissions of original research articles in

Research paper thumbnail of Call for Papers — Recognition and Recovery of Caribbean Canadian Cultural Production   for a special issue of Canada and Beyond: a Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies (Deadline is July 31, 2021)

Research paper thumbnail of CFP: Rescaling CanLit: Global Readings

CALL FOR PAPERs for a special ISSUE of Canadian LIterature

Research paper thumbnail of CFP: Vulnerable Times: Exposure and Agency in Canadian Literature Call for Papers for a Special Issue of a major international peer-reviewed journal Guest edited by Eva Darias-Beautell (Universidad de La Laguna)

Research paper thumbnail of Editorial: Rescaling CanLit: Global Readings. Canadian Literature: A quarterly of Criticism and Review 238 (2019): 6-11.

Canadian Literature: A Quarterly of Criticism and Review 238, 2019

Research paper thumbnail of The Life of Others: Narratives of Vulnerability (Introduction to the Issue)

A J o u r n a l o f C a n a d i a n Literary and Cultural Studies

Research paper thumbnail of Angels in the Library: A Review of Smaro Kamboureli's Scandalous Bodies

Research paper thumbnail of Editorial Vol. 10

Canada and Beyond 10, 2021

Coinciding with its 10th anniversary, Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultu... more Coinciding with its 10th anniversary, Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies has joined the University of Salamanca publishing program. This issue marks not only the journal’s move to a new location, but also the beginning of a new phase. As co-editors of Canada and Beyond, we assume the challenge of steering the journal at a time of profound and overlapping global crises such as those derived from climate change, the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine, as well as ongoing frictions that continue to deepen social and economic inequities in Canada and elsewhere. We understand this journal as a space for critical reflection and imaginative approaches to the literary and cultural production coming from Canada/Turtle Island and reaching out to the world in these complex times.

Research paper thumbnail of Editorial Vol. 11

Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies , 2022

Research paper thumbnail of Review of The Urban Condition: Literary Trajectories through the Canadian Postmetropolis by Anna Branach-Kallas

European Journal of English Studies 24:1, 101-102, 2020

Research paper thumbnail of "The Traffic of Affects in Michael Helm’s Cities of Refuge", in Darias Beautell, E. (Ed.), The Urban Condition: Literary Trajectories through Canada’s Postmetropolis, Vernon Press, 2019.

This article draws attention to Helm’s nuanced rendition of the twenty-first century city of Toro... more This article draws attention to Helm’s nuanced rendition of the twenty-first century city of Toronto as the setting where analytical reason and sensory perception clash, compete and intertwine in the characters’ quest for the production of order out of chaos, meaning, understanding, and knowledge. Though seemingly relying on the dichotomy reason/emotion for character construction, the novel resists both the privileging of Cartesian rationalism prevalent in Western thought, and the wholesale allegiance to affect as an epistemological source consisting of “a substrate of potential bodily responses, often autonomic responses, in excess of consciousness” with the capacity both “to affect and be affected or the augmentation or diminution of a body’s capacity to act, to engage, and to connect” (Clough 2007, 2).

Research paper thumbnail of The Life of Others: Narratives of Vulnerability

Canada and Beyond, 2018

This special issue of Canada and Beyond looks into contemporary Canadian cultural production in E... more This special issue of Canada and Beyond looks into contemporary Canadian cultural production in English through the Butlerian notions of vulnerability and precarity. It aims to provide a critical view of the field with an emphasis on the discursive modes that address, critique or produce vulnerability on local and global scales.

Research paper thumbnail of In search of new metaphors: an interview with Linda Hutcheon

Revista canaria de estudios ingleses, 2001

... In search of new metaphors: an interview with Linda Hutcheon. Autores: Eva Darias Beautell; L... more ... In search of new metaphors: an interview with Linda Hutcheon. Autores: Eva Darias Beautell; Localización: Revista canaria de estudios ingleses, ISSN 0211-5913, Nº 43, 2001 , págs. 179-192. Fundación Dialnet. Acceso de usuarios registrados. ...