Introduction to the christian thought and religious of Galdos
Main Article Content
Abstract
Pérez Galdós should be considered the best exponent of the Spanish narrative, with Cervantes, for his descriptive linguistic richness and analytical of the complexity and greatness of the human being; combining fiction, symbol and documentary truthfulness throughout a huge production for fifty years. But, likewise, for the depth of the religious and Christian treatment given to the testimonial literary world created by him; also for the prophetic character of his theology.
The article, of an introductory and suggestive nature, demands attention to this dimension
of the Galdosian work by those responsable for rediscovering, lovingly saving and restoring in our country cultural legacies that feed us. In particular, by those who revive the history of theology and Christian heritage with the imprint of the narrative, the symbolic and the prophetic.
Downloads
Article Details
Previously, the journal had copyright. Currently, since 2020, the journal publishes under the Creative Commons license.
The authors who publish in the Archivo Teológico Granadino, will accept the following conditions:
The authors retain the copyright © and assign to the journal the right of publication, under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0).
The artics can be copied, used, disseminated, transmitted and publicly exhibited provided that:
- They cite the authorship of the work, the publication in the Archivo Teologico Granadino, number, year and the pages in which the information was found.
- No commercial profit can be made.
- Derivative works cannot be made for commercial purposes that are not authorized by the journal.
It is allowed and encouraged the authors to disseminate the article (Archivo Teológico Granadino, number, year, pagination, ISSN, DOI, etc.) to promote circulation and dissemination, increasing your citation and scope between the community academic.
Information in the journal will be provided to Dulcinea y Sherpa Romeo.