Barry Jordan

Nombre: 
Barry
Apellidos: 
Jordan
Sexo: 
Hombre
Categoría profesional: 
Professor
Hispanista Emérito: 
No
Materias de especialidad: 
Universidad/Centro de investigación: 
De Montfort University Leicester
Departamento/Centro: 
School of Media and Communication
País: 
Reino Unido
Página de internet personal: 
Trabajos publicados: 

  • Jordan, B. (2013). «Beating the crisis in Spanish filmmaking: The international coproduction and the “marca España”». Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hispanicos, 37 (1), pp. 87-109.

  • Jordan, B. (2012) Alejandro Amenabar. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

  • Jordan, B. (2011) «Audiences, Film Culture, Public Subsidies: The End of Spanish Cinema?» In: Davies, A. ed. Spain on screen. Developments in contemporary Spanish Cinema, London: Palgrave Macmillan, pp.19-40.

  • Jordan, B. (2007) «Genre and screen violence: Revisiting Tesis (Alejandro Amenábar 1995)» In: Resina, J.R. ed. Burning Darkness. A Half Century of Spanish Cinema. New York: SUNY Press. pp. 173-193.

  • Jordan, B. (2006) «Late-Francoist film comedy and the reactionary film text». Studies in Hispanic Cinemas, 2 (2), pp. 83-105.

  • Jordan, B. and Allinson, M. (2005) Spanish Cinema: A Student’s Guide. London: Hodder Arnold.

  • Jordan, B. (2003) «Spain's 'new cinema' of the 1990s: Santiago Segura and the Torrente phenomenon». New Cinemas: Journal of Contemporary Film, 1 (3), pp. 191-207.

  • Jordan, B. (2003) «Revisiting the ‘comedia sexy ibérica’: No desearás al vecino del quinto». International Journal of Iberian Studies, 15 (3), pp. 167-186.

  • Jordan, B. (2000) «How Spanish is it? Spanish Cinema and National Identity». In: Jordan, B. and Morgan-Tamosunas, R. eds. Contemporary Spanish Cultural Studies, London: Arnold, pp.68-78.

  • Jordan, B. (2000) «The Spanish Film Industry in the 1980s and 1990s». In: Jordan, B. and Morgan-Tamosunas, R. eds. Contemporary Spanish Cultural Studies, London: Arnold, pp. 179-92.

Asociaciones a las que pertenece: 
Association of Hispanists of Great Britain and Ireland
Hispanista Histórico: 
No
Hispanista: 
Si