Long overshadowed by the subsequent 1960s ‘Boom’, Cuban novels of the 1950s have been confined to the backwater of literary analysis, often grouped together and dismissed as mere social realism like their Spanish counterparts, or described as inferior. The spatial has been similarly overlooked in literary analysis in favour of a focus on stylistic experimentation, narrative structure, characterisation and the temporal. More recently, however, theorists have argued that literature has become increasingly spatial, and that a greater focus on the spatial is needed. Furthermore, conceptions of space in literature have moved from the static notion of ‘setting’ within a specific location and time, to embrace the function of actual physical spaces, whether exterior or interior, public or private, embedded or liminal, juxtaposed, dynamic, static or fluid. This analysis demonstrates that spaces in these novels are essentially dynamic and female-gendered, that female sexual identity triumphs... Это и многое другое вы найдете в книге The Function of Physical Space in the Cuban Novel of the 1950s (Jill Ingham)