<p>Este libro ofrece la primera revisi&oacute;n en forma de volumen monogr&aacute;fico de las transferencias culturales de Gran Breta&ntilde;a a Espa&ntilde;a en el siglo XVIII centr&aacute;ndose en particular en el g&eacute;nero m&aacute;s novedoso del setecientos la p&oacute;dica. Para ello explora el fen&oacute;meno hasta ahora difuso de la angloman&iacute;a---moda de la ideas influencias y estilos ingleses que domin&oacute; la Europa del setecientos---y su fen&oacute;meno opuesto la anglofobia llevando a cabo una lectura y an&aacute;lisis de la transmisi&oacute;n recepci&oacute;n y adaptaci&oacute;n de las ideas y reformas brit&aacute;nicas en tres tipos de prensa bien diferenciados en conjunci&oacute;n con la propia coyuntura nacional y el programa de reformas borb&oacute;nico. Adembra enfatiza la labor de estos periodistas y peri&oacute;dicos as&iacute; como sus conexiones con el poder aspecto poco estudiado por la cr&iacute;tica hasta el momento a la vez que los sit&uacute;a como agentes fundamentales de esa red europea de intercambios materiales e intelectuales que sustent&oacute; la Rep&uacute;blica de las Letras. Con todo ello este volumen contribuye a la serie de debates dedicados a la reevaluaci&oacute;n de la Ilustraci&oacute;n espa&ntilde;ola que buscan situarla en el mapa de las Luces Europeas de entonces y de ahora. LETICIA VILLAMEDIANA GONZ&Aacute;LEZ es un Senior Teaching Fellow in Hispanic Studies at the University of Warwick. This book constitutes the first monographic study of the cultural transfers from Great Britain to Spain through 18th-Century periodical press one of the most innovative genres of the period. It explores the notion of anglomania - the craze for all things English which spread throughout all Europe - and its reactive phenomenon anglophobia offering a contextualised analysis of the transmission reception and adaptation of British Enlightened ideas and reforms in three different types of Spanish periodicals. In so doing this volume brings to the fore the work of some understudied writers and journalists and situates these important periodicals and their connections to power as a key part of a wider European context of material and intellectual exchanges that sustained the Republic of Letters. This in turn contributes to recent scholarship arguing for a central place of Spain in the intellectual map of the Enlightenment. LETICIA VILLAMEDIANA GONZ&Aacute;LEZ is a Senior Teaching Fellow in Hispanic Studies at the University of Warwick.</p>
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