15 research outputs found

    The Generation of 1898 and Cervantes: The invention of Don Quixote as a national symbol

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    Don Quixote became a Spanish national symbol thanks to the authors the Generation of 1898, such as Miguel de Unamuno, Azorín and Francisco Navarra Ledesma, who published their new interpretations during the 1905 commemoration of the publication of Cervantes', The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha. Already a few months after suffering a humiliating defeat in the Spanish-American War of 1898, the famous novelist Benito Pérez Galdós argued that having lost the last vestiges of its once enormous colonial empire, Spain's greatest remaining source of pride was its magnificent cultural past, especially the great literary masterpiece of Miguel de Cervantes. Thus, in 1905 the publication of the novel was celebrated in a magnificent nation-wide commemoration, in which Don Quixote was praised as one of the highlights of Spain's literary heritage. However, it were the authors of the Generation of 1898 who converted the novel's hero into a national myth. In new masterpieces, such as Azorín's La ruta de Don Quijote and Unamuno's The Life of Don Quixote and Sancho, they presented a new vitalist interpretation of Cervantes' novel, while making the fictional character of Don Quixote into a symbol of the entire nation. This way Don Quixote became larger than Cervantes himself, and this view was in a way immortalized in stone in the monument that was erected in the following decades at the Plaza de España of Madrid.</p

    Integrating Process Modeling Methodology, Language and Tool – A Design Science Approach

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    Part 5: Enterprise Modelling and Information SystemsInternational audienceProviding high quality process models in a timely manner can be of major impact on almost all process management projects. Modeling methodologies in the form of normative procedure models and process modeling guidelines are available to facilitate this cause. Modeling languages and according tools, however, do neglect the available methodologies. Our work searches to close this research gap by proposing a modeling environment that integrates insights from modeling methodologies with a modeling language and a tool. Main features are a simple modeling language that generalizes most existing languages, four layers of abstraction and semantic standardization through a glossary and use of attributes. Our approach allows for rapid preparation of modeling activities and ensures high model quality during all modeling phases, thus minimizing rework of the models. The prototype was evaluated and improved during two practical projects
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