Course Description 

An overview of the School of Salamanca, the main intellectual current of early modern Spain. The course consists of three main chapters on the school’s contributions to Human Rights, Politics, and Economics, plus an introduction, a conclusion, and brief chapters on the school’s founder Francisco de Vitoria and its climactic figure Juan de Mariana. Learn about the origins of the Hispanic liberal tradition as well as the scope of its fundamental influence on modern Western Civilization. Win a badge by successfully completing the activities of the course.

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Lenght

5 Weeks

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Effort

5 hours per week

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Certification

USD$60

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Professor Eric Clifford Graf

Eric Clifford Graf is a professor of literature at Universidad Francisco Marroquín. He has a PhD in Spanish language and literature from the University of Virginia (1997). He has worked at the University of Virginia, the College of William & Mary, the University of Chicago, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Smith College, Wesleyan University, and Kershner Trading Group. He specializes in medieval and early modern Spain, the history of the novel, Renaissance studies, and literary, political, cultural, and economic theory. He is author of the book Cervantes and Modernity (Bucknell University Press, 2007). In addition to numerous academic essays on the poetry, theater, and narrative of Miguel de Cervantes, he has also published on The Poem of the Cid, Garcilaso de la Vega, Juan de Mariana, El Greco, San Juan de la Cruz, Pedro de Calderón, José de Cadalso, Vicente Aleixandre, Julio Cortázar, and Sigmund Freud.

Contact Us

    Contact


    Calle Manuel F. Ayau (6 Calle final), zona 10
    Guatemala, Guatemala 01010
    salamanca@ufm.edu
    (+502) 2338-7849

    Calle Manuel F. Ayau (6 Calle final), zona 10
    Guatemala, Guatemala 01010
    salamanca@ufm.edu
    (+502) 2338-7849