In this Issue
Hopscotch represents an invitation to look at past and present Hispanic cultures anew, to revisit its multifaceted history and identity by reencountering its diverse roots and heritage-from indigenous peoples to European settlers, from African slaves brought during colonial times to the subsequent waves of immigration from Asia, the Middle East, and Western and Eastern Europe. The journal covers art, literature, cinema, and politics and begins to consider the many faces of Hispanics in the world today.
published by
Duke University Pressviewing issue
Volume 2, Number 3, 2001Table of Contents
- Introduction
- pp. 2-5
Part 1
- John Phillips (1687): Chapter 7
- pp. 20-23
- John Stevens (1700): Chapter 19
- pp. 34-37
- George Kelly (1769): Chapter 45
- pp. 70-73
- Don Quixote: A Study in Contrasts
- pp. 74-83
Part 2
- T. T. Shore (1864): Chapter 9
- pp. 84-87
- John Ormsby (1885): Chapters 20-21
- pp. 88-99
- Henry Edward Watts (1888): Chapter 27
- pp. 100-105
- Robinson Smith (1910): Chapters 30-31
- pp. 106-113
- Samuel Putnam (1949): Chapters 36-37
- pp. 114-119
- J. M. Cohen (1961): Chapters 42-43
- pp. 120-127
- Burton Raffel (1995): Chapters 70, 74
- pp. 128-137