This book provides detailed textual analysis of six important Spanish novelists whose works were written since the Spanish Civil War.Since the Civil War, Spanish novelists have produced a noteworthy body of fiction. Jo Labanyi provides detailed textual analysis of six of the most important novels of the period and raises important general issues about the ways in which fiction, as a form of mythicfication, relates to the real world.Since the Civil War, Spanish novelists have produced a noteworthy body of fiction. Jo Labanyi provides detailed textual analysis of six of the most important novels of the period and raises important general issues about the ways in which fiction, as a form of mythicfication, relates to the real world.Since the Civil War, Spanish novelists have produced a noteworthy body of fiction. In this book, Jo Labanyi provides detailed textual analysis of six of the most important novels to have been written during this period: Martin-Santos' Tiempo de silencio, Benet's Volver?s a Regi?n, Mars?'s Si te dicen que ca?, Cela's San Camilo, 1936, Juan Goytisolo's Reivindicaci?n del conde don Juli?n, and Torrente Ballester's La saga/fuga de J.B. The focus on myth as a response to history is intended as a corrective to archetypal myth criticism, and stresses the variety of ways in which Spanish novelists have resorted to myth, and the need to relate their use of it to the historical context of Francoist ideology. The book also raises important general issues about the ways in which fiction, as a form of mythification, relates to the real world.Introduction; 1. The historical uses of myth; 2. Myth and Nationalist Spain; 3. Fiction as mask Tiempo de silencio; 4. Fiction as echo: Volver?s a Regi?n; 5. Fiction as corruption: Si te dicen que ca?; 6. Fiction as release: San Camilo, 1936, Reivindicaci?n del conde don Juli?n, La saga/fuga de J.B; Notes; Select bibliography; Index.