Tides of Progress: Anglo-Hispanic Print Culture, 18901945
By (Author) Dr. Peter Hulme
Edited by Dr. or Prof. Ana Rodrguez Navas
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
13th November 2025
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
History of ideas
Hardback
256
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
The first study of Anglo-Hispanic exchanges in print culture between the Spanish-American War and the Spanish Civil War, surfacing new archival materials to shed light on global modernities and regional interactions.
Tides of Progress studies the connections, interactions, and mutual appraisals between the Hispanic and Anglo spheres during a critical period in which print culture evolved from the province of the lettered few into a mass-media phenomenon. Print culture is increasingly gaining recognition as a fruitful area for literary study and literary history, and this volumes comparative approach significantly expands the scope of current scholarship.
Across all the main venues of the book New York, Mexico City, San Juan, Buenos Aires, Kingston, Panama City, Guadalajara periodicals flourished, borrowing and translating freely across linguistic boundaries. In some cases, they simply imported ideas; in others, they offered translated texts, ran columns in the other language, or even produced fully bilingual editions. Ideas of progress were reframed by translation, and they were often coded as modernity in terms of consumer products or modernism in literary texts, in contradistinction to more local forms such as literary modernismo.
Tides of Progress provides compelling insights into and challenges assumptions about some of the regions key literary figures while also surfacing significant new archival materials. The volumes authors collectively present print culture as becoming one of the most visible ways through which modernity and ideas of progress were encountered, consumed, shared, and assimilated by the public, in both the Anglo and Hispanic spheres.
Ana Rodrguez Navas is Associate Professor of Latin American Literature and Culture at Loyola University Chicago, USA. She is author of Idle Talk, Deadly Talk: The Uses of Gossip in Caribbean Literature (2018).
Peter Hulme is Emeritus Professor in the Department of Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies at University of Essex, UK. His publications include The Dinner at Gonfarones: Salomn de la Selva and His Pan-American Project in Nueva York, 1915-1919 (2019) and Red and Black in Harlem and Jamaica: The Revolutionary Life and Selected Writings of W. A. Domingo (2025; with Leslie James).