Peter W. Evans
Newcastle University
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Hispanic Research Journal-iberian and Latin American Studies | 2007
Chris Perriam; Isabel Santaolalla; Peter W. Evans
Transnationalism is as old as cinema, which from its earliest days has been a hybrid art. In Hollywood, for instance, the great emigre directors — for example, Lubitsch, Lang, Sirk, Hitchcock — brought with them the tastes and mannerisms of their European heritage. Lubitsch’s romantic comedies are film equivalents of Marivaux or Wilde; Lang’s German Expressionism casts a lugubrious and creative shadow over the visual style of his great films noirs; Sirk’s Universal melodramas are shot through with Euripidean irony; Hitchcock uses English novelists (Daphne du Maurier) and actors (Cary Grant) for some of his otherwise most American of films. In Spain and Latin America transnationalism has an equally venerable history. The Spanish pioneers learnt from Melies and Lumiere; Bunuel’s Un chien andalou (1929) pays homage to the Hollywood slapstick stars. The extent of the interest from the 1930s onwards in transnational projects is illustrated by the meeting of the first Congreso Hispanoamericano de Cinematografia in Madrid in 1931, as well as by the productive interchange of films between Spain and Latin America, and the economic as well as ideological concerns that led to equally fruitful co-production agreements over the years. This rapprochement with Latin America continued in the early Franco years (Gonzalez Acevedo 2005: 149), especially in relation to Mexico, and fostered co-productions involving stars like Carmen Sevilla, Jorge Negrete and Dolores del Rio. The pattern continued into the 1950s and 1960s with films directed, on the Spanish side by, for instance, Leon Klimowsky, and on the Spanish American by, for instance, Leopoldo Torre-Nilsson. Later, Borau — often packing his films with international stars (such as Stephane Audran in Hay que matar a B., 1975, or Jon Finch in La Sabina, 1979) — cast the ninety-year-old Sam Jaffe in a minor role in Rio abajo (1984), expecting audiences to remember his cameo in The Asphalt Jungle (John Huston, 1950). In more recent times, how would Almodovar’s films fare without that playful intertextuality that through allusion to, for example, Johnny Guitar (Nicholas Ray, 1954), Duel in the Sun (King Vidor, 1946), or All About Eve (Joseph L. Mankiewicz, 1950), forms so vital a part of his every film?
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
Keith Izod; Peter W. Evans; Paul G. Waddell
Abstract There is growing interest in compounds containing functionalized E=E multiple bonds (E=Si, Ge, Sn, Pb) because of their potential to exhibit novel physical and chemical properties. However, compounds containing multiple functionalizations are rare, with scarcity increasing with increasing degree of substitution. The first ditetrelene R2E=ER2 in which the E=E bond is substituted by four heteroatoms (other than Si) is described. The tetraphosphadisilene {(Mes)2P}2Si=Si{P(Mes)2}2 (7) is readily isolated from the reaction between SiBr4 and [(Mes)2P]Li, the latter of which acts as a sacrificial reducing agent. The structure of 7 is presented, while the bonding in, and stability of 7 were probed using DFT calculations.
Bulletin of Hispanic Studies | 1993
Peter W. Evans
Kenneth Reid was born in Newcastle in 1913, and graduated with Honours in French at Kings College, Newcastle, University of Durham in 1935. He subsequently obtained the degree of B.A. Honours in Spanish at London University, and was awarded his Ph.D. by Durham University in 1951. The subject of his dissertation was ‘The Early Works of Jose Ortega y Gasset’. By this time, after teaching in schools in England and France between 1931 and 1941, he had become a member of the Spanish department at Kings College, Newcastle, University of Durham. Joining in 1943, he succeeded Edward Sarmiento in 1954 as Reader, and was appointed to the Chair of Spanish and Latin American Studies in 1971. On retirement at Newcastle he became an Honorary Fellow in Spanish at Exeter University (1982–85).
Archive | 1993
Bruce Babington; Peter W. Evans
Modern Language Review | 1996
Peter W. Evans
Modern Language Review | 2001
Maria Donapetry; Peter W. Evans
Archive | 1985
Bruce Babington; Peter W. Evans
Modern Language Review | 1992
Edward H. Friedman; Peter W. Evans
Inorganic Chemistry | 2016
Keith Izod; Peter W. Evans; Paul G. Waddell; Michael R. Probert
Bulletin of Hispanic Studies | 1993
Peter W. Evans