A comprehensive examination of the full range of Carmen Martín Gaite's
work.
Carmen Martín Gaite produced a large body of work in various genres over
the course of her five-decade career, though she is primarily known as a
novelist, short story writer, and social commentator. Her work at times
reflects, and at times defies, the pattern of development in Spanish
fiction since the 1950s. This Companion offers a re-reading of Martín
Gaite's works, emphasizing her early experimentalism which culminated in
mid-career works (notably El cuarto de atrás), and stressing how, in the
late 1960s and early 1970s when the majority of Spanish novelists were
engaged in a critique of history, Martín Gaite turned to the writing of
cultural history, exploring its intersection with narrative fiction in a
positivist rather than a nihilistic mode. Her exploration of gender
issues, particularly mother-child relations, towards the end of her
career anticipated new directions in feminist thought. Discussions of
often-ignored works, such as poetry, drama, children's literature, and
literary translations, offer insight into sidelined aspects of this
writer's literary output.
Catherine O'Leary is Reader in Spanish at the University of St Andrews.
Alison Ribeiro de Menezes is Professor of Spanish at the University of
Warwick.