‘para empresas más altas y de mayor importancia’

Author(s):  
Benjamin J. Nelson

Due to the popularity of Don Quixote and later works, Cervantes’s La Galatea has suffered from being overlooked or maligned. This chapter argues that Cervantes, by choosing the pastoral as his first substantial narrative, continues the tradition of the pastoral novel initiated by Montemayor’s La Diana and supersedes it. Cervantes introduces himself as an Orphic poet who participates in the famed rota Virgilii, or Virgil’s Wheel, which may have originated from the enigmatic verses that appeared in the frontispiece of a first-century edition of Virgil’s Aeneid: ‘I am he who once tuned my song on a slender reed, / then, leaving the woodland, compelled the neighbouring / fields to serve the husbandman, however grasping— / a work welcome to farmers: but now of Mars’ bristling’. By starting with the pastoral, a writer would emulate the famed Virgil by later composing works comparable to the Georgics and, afterwards, to the Aeneid.

Author(s):  
Rachel N. Bauer

Cervantes experimented with different writing styles and did not recycle personality traits amongst his characters, including those considered mad. Unlike the stereotype of the madman that often figured in early modern theatre, no Cervantine character is consistently mad throughout the entire work in which he or she appears. Characters become mad, fluctuate in degrees of mental imbalance, may temporarily express manic rage, and usually regain sanity at some point in the text. Cervantes allows his characters to evolve beyond their character types, and this includes for some of them transitioning through different degrees of insanity. This chapter aims to serve as a guide for those interested in reviewing the theme of madness in Cervantine literature, along with possible sources of influence contemporary to Cervantes in literature and medicine. It also explores twentieth and twenty-first century research focusing on madness in Don Quixote as well as in Cervantes’s other literary creations.


2003 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 139-157
Author(s):  
Gudrun Hofmann

Zusammenfassung. Don Quijote und Sancho Panza, von Miguel de Cervantes Saavedras 1605/1612 geschaffene Romanhelden, erfreuen sich auch im Jahre 2003 eines großen Bekanntheitsgrades und sind als komisches Paar berühmt geworden. Beide verstricken sich in Abenteuer, die einzig ihrer Fantasie erwachsen. Im folgenden steht das Komische - aus nicht der Norm entsprechendem Verhalten oder aus wahnhaften Imaginationen erwachsend - in der literarischen Vorgabe wie auch in dem sinfonischen Tongedicht “Don Quixote“ von Richard Strauss im Mittelpunkt. Daran schließen sich Überlegungen zu einer tänzerischen Umsetzung im Rahmen eines therapeutischen Settings an. Es wird analysiert, wie sich Menschen mit unterschiedlichen Persönlichkeitszügen (resp. -störungen) darin wiederfinden können und wie die Charaktere von Don Quijote und Sancho Panza im Sinne einer eigenen Interpretation weiterentwickelt werden können. Aspekte der von Helmut Plessner vertretenen anthropologischen Betrachtungsweise des Lachens beleuchten die nur dem Menschen eigene Fähigkeit komisch zu sein und Komisches wahrzunehmen.


1976 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 679-680
Author(s):  
RONALD K. SIEGEL
Keyword(s):  

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne-Marie Labbate ◽  
Cilantro ◽  
Cervantes
Keyword(s):  

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