José Manuel Blecua Teijeiro

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

José Manuel Blecua Teijeiro (

Spanish Literature at the University of Barcelona and a member of the Royal Spanish Academy.[2]

He took his bachelor's degree at the College of Saint Thomas Aquinas in

Universidad de Barcelona,[3] where he was one of the founders of the Spanish Philological Institute. He wrote his doctoral thesis on El Cancionero de 1628, a long poem by Adrián de Prado [es
].

Blecua specialized in poetry and literature from the "

Siglo de Oro". He published many works on that period and produced a monumental critical edition of the poetry of Francisco de Quevedo. He also edited a major anthology of Spanish Renaissance poetry
.

In 1993, he was awarded the seventh Menéndez Pelayo International Prize. An institute in Zaragoza has been named after him.

Selected works

  • Los Pájaros en la Poesía Española Hispanica (1943)
  • Las Flores en la Poesía Española Hispanica (1944)
  • Preceptiva Literaria y Nociones de Gramática Histórica, Aula (1944)
  • Historia General de la Literatura, Librería General (1944)
  • El Mar en la Poesía Española Hispanica (1945)
  • Lengua Española, Librería General (1959)
  • Los Géneros Literarios y su Historia, Librería General (1961)
  • Historia y Textos de la Literatura Española, Librería General (1963)
  • Sobre Poesía de la Edad de Oro: Ensayos y Notas Eruditas, Gredos (1970)
  • Lingüística y Significacíon, Salvat (1973)
  • Sobre el Rigor Poético en España y Otros Ensayos, Ariel (1977)
  • Homenajes y Otras Labores, Institución Fernando el Católico (1990)

References

  1. ^ "José Manuel Blecua Teijeiro - DB~e". dbe.rah.es (in Spanish). Real Academia de la Historia. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  2. ^ Biografías y Vidas: José Manuel Blecua
  3. ^ "Gran Enciclopedia Aragonesa: José Manuel Blecua". Archived from the original on 2016-09-06. Retrieved 2013-08-20.

External links