Resultados de búsqueda (2)
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1
Estudio crítico
- Título:
-
"Don Quijote" and the Romances of Chivalry: The Need for a Reexamination / Daniel Eisenberg - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
-
Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946-
- Portales:
-
Miguel de Cervantes
Visitar sitio web
| Figuras del Hispanismo
Visitar sitio web
| Libros de caballerías
Visitar sitio web
- Materia:
-
Novela de caballería -- Historia y crítica
- Mat. aut.:
-
Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de (1547-1616) -- Don Quijote de la Mancha
- Fragmentos
'cervantes' en la obra
: (40
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
In
conclusion, a thorough study of the chivalric sources of the
Quijote, preliminary to one of Cervantes
-
Certainly Philesbián de Candaria is
another example of a romance Cervantes knew, which is never
mentioned
-
scholars have neglected the study of the
Quijote in the light of the romances of chivalry that
inspired Cervantes
-
Pascual de Gayangos and Sir Henry Thomas, have
not considered themselves knowledgeable enough about Cervantes
-
criticism to be the study of a
work’s sources, he attempted to read as many as possible of
the books Cervantes
-
He believed that Cervantes wrote the
Quijote to banish the romances of chivalry, and comments at
length
-
on Cervantes’ apparent justification in doing so in
the prologue to his commentary.
-
Rather than specify all those romances which Cervantes had contact
with, it is safer to proceed in the
-
novela, second
«edición nacional» [Madrid: C.S.I.C., 1962], I,
311-13), considered it «imposible que Cervantes
-
no conociera [el
Cifar]» («Cultura literaria de Miguel
de Cervantes y elaboración del Quijote», in
San
-
Isidoro, Cervantes y otros estudios, Colección
Austral, 2nd ed.
-
], 416); it too might well have been mentioned, as it
was an old book, and therefore of interest to Cervantes
-
At the other extreme, it is true,
as Rodríguez Marín points out, that Cervantes was in
Valladolid in
-
To say that it was Policisne de Boecia
which caused a dismayed Cervantes to expand his novela
ejemplar
-
Rodríguez Marín tried to find sources for
Cervantes’ literary works in contemporary history; his
discoveries
-
, like the similar ones of Luis Astrana, remain
controversial.
6
For
Cervantes, of course
-
romances of chivalry from a quantitative standpoint we need to
establish how many romances of chivalry Cervantes
-
At the same time we can discuss the extent of
Cervantes’ acquaintance if we pause to consider how many
-
To this number we should add two works
which Cervantes believed to be Spanish, although we know now they
-
together with the names of the chivalric romances
there is additional information which shows that Cervantes
-
For example, it is certain that
Cervantes knew more of the Espejo de príncipes y
caballeros than the
-
The innkeeper in I, 32 tells several
details about his books; Cervantes knew enough of
Belianís de Grecia
-
Cervantes’
knowledge of Tirante el Blanco was so thorough that he
remembered the insignificant character
-
Calahorra, speaks in the first person, as he does on infrequent
occasions, his tone is similar to that of Cervantes
-
In
the realm of style, Hatzfeld has seen in Cervantes’ use of
contrary-to-fact conditional sentences
-
In fact, this sentence structure is a common feature of the
romances of chivalry, which Cervantes has
-
He found evidence that Cervantes knew at least
one romance of chivalry not referred to by name, and
Rodríguez
-
happened to open at random a
copy of Book IV of Clarián de Landanís, also a
work never mentioned by Cervantes
-
problems of style, oral and written, so
that we still know only through intuition the extent to which
Cervantes
-
The
other alternative -if one assumes that Cervantes’
acquaintance with the romances of chivalry was
-
It
is also clear, even from those titles that are explicitly mentioned
in the Quijote, that Cervantes
-
We
may well pause a moment to wonder how and where Cervantes was able
to read these books, since he was
-
have had trouble obtaining these
books in La Mancha, no more a cultural center then than it is now,
so Cervantes
-
All this leads to the suggestion that Cervantes might not have
purchased the books himself, but rather
-
This would be even more likely if it is true that Cervantes
«discovered» the romances of chivalry not
-
But even if Cervantes knew this, the convoluted
conversations («intricadas razones»), which
were the
-
McCready, «Cervantes and
the Caballero Fonseca», MLN, 73 (1958), 33-35, because
he opened the book at
-
In fact, aside from Cervantes, it
is only mentioned by some moralists whose acquaintance with it was
-
various aspects of the work,
though in neither of these is the question of the work’s
influence on Cervantes
-
Edwin Place’s
«Cervantes and the Amadís», Hispanic
Studies in Honor of Nicholson B.
- Formatos:
-
-
Resultado número:2
Estudio crítico
- Título:
-
Who Read the Romances of Chivalry? / by Daniel Eisenberg - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
-
Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946-
- Portales:
-
Figuras del Hispanismo
Visitar sitio web
| Libros de caballerías
Visitar sitio web
- Materias:
-
Novela de caballería Siglo 16º -- Historia y crítica | Caballeros y caballería
- Fragmentos
'cervantes' en la obra
: (13
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
de Boecia
in 1602 (written before 1600; see Luis Astrana Marín, Vida ejemplar y
heroica de Miguel de Cervantes
-
Cervantes'
unnamed friend of the Prologue to Part I is more specific: "Esta
vuestra escritura no mira
-
I, 50; Cervantes, El vizcaíno fingido,
p. 530 of the edition of Francisco Ynduráin, BAE, 156 (Madrid:
-
Furthermore, considering the tone of the Prologue to Part I, and the narrow
interpretation Cervantes'
-
Whether or not he speaks for Cervantes,35 he is presented as a sober and serious man, deeply conceraed
-
particular social class.38 This is spelled out
35
Bruce Wardropper maintains that he does not, in "Cervantes
-
Wardropper is supported,
on different grounds, by Alban Forcione, Cervantes, Aristotle, and the Persiles
-
Spanish Siglo de Oro," Studies in the Renaissance,
4 (1957), 190-200; Américo Castro, El pensamiento de Cervantes
-
merely meaning "todo aquel que no sabe," it is true
that the romances were read by the vulgo. 37
en Cervantes
-
Aside from a passage in the prologue to the Quijote of Avellaneda,
obviously based on the passage in Cervantes
-
as readers of romances of chivalry, in the Florisando, Book VI
of the Arnadís series, a work which Cervantes
-
Perhaps it was in the Duke of Béjar's library, if there was a collection of romances of chivalry, that Cervantes
-
Cervantes signs himself criado in the dedications to the Conde de Lemos
(as does Sancho in his letter
- Formatos:
-
Filtros de la búsqueda
- Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946- 2 [Eliminar filtro]
- 1973 2 [Eliminar filtro]
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1 Estudio crítico
- Título:
- "Don Quijote" and the Romances of Chivalry: The Need for a Reexamination / Daniel Eisenberg - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
- Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946-
- Portales:
- Miguel de Cervantes Visitar sitio web | Figuras del Hispanismo Visitar sitio web | Libros de caballerías Visitar sitio web
- Materia:
- Novela de caballería -- Historia y crítica
- Mat. aut.:
- Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de (1547-1616) -- Don Quijote de la Mancha
- Fragmentos 'cervantes' en la obra : (40 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- In conclusion, a thorough study of the chivalric sources of the Quijote, preliminary to one of Cervantes
- Certainly Philesbián de Candaria is another example of a romance Cervantes knew, which is never mentioned
- scholars have neglected the study of the Quijote in the light of the romances of chivalry that inspired Cervantes
- Pascual de Gayangos and Sir Henry Thomas, have not considered themselves knowledgeable enough about Cervantes
- criticism to be the study of a work’s sources, he attempted to read as many as possible of the books Cervantes
- He believed that Cervantes wrote the Quijote to banish the romances of chivalry, and comments at length
- on Cervantes’ apparent justification in doing so in the prologue to his commentary.
- Rather than specify all those romances which Cervantes had contact with, it is safer to proceed in the
- novela, second «edición nacional» [Madrid: C.S.I.C., 1962], I, 311-13), considered it «imposible que Cervantes
- no conociera [el Cifar]» («Cultura literaria de Miguel de Cervantes y elaboración del Quijote», in San
- Isidoro, Cervantes y otros estudios, Colección Austral, 2nd ed.
- ], 416); it too might well have been mentioned, as it was an old book, and therefore of interest to Cervantes
- At the other extreme, it is true, as Rodríguez Marín points out, that Cervantes was in Valladolid in
- To say that it was Policisne de Boecia which caused a dismayed Cervantes to expand his novela ejemplar
- Rodríguez Marín tried to find sources for Cervantes’ literary works in contemporary history; his discoveries
- , like the similar ones of Luis Astrana, remain controversial. 6 For Cervantes, of course
- romances of chivalry from a quantitative standpoint we need to establish how many romances of chivalry Cervantes
- At the same time we can discuss the extent of Cervantes’ acquaintance if we pause to consider how many
- To this number we should add two works which Cervantes believed to be Spanish, although we know now they
- together with the names of the chivalric romances there is additional information which shows that Cervantes
- For example, it is certain that Cervantes knew more of the Espejo de príncipes y caballeros than the
- The innkeeper in I, 32 tells several details about his books; Cervantes knew enough of Belianís de Grecia
- Cervantes’ knowledge of Tirante el Blanco was so thorough that he remembered the insignificant character
- Calahorra, speaks in the first person, as he does on infrequent occasions, his tone is similar to that of Cervantes
- In the realm of style, Hatzfeld has seen in Cervantes’ use of contrary-to-fact conditional sentences
- In fact, this sentence structure is a common feature of the romances of chivalry, which Cervantes has
- He found evidence that Cervantes knew at least one romance of chivalry not referred to by name, and Rodríguez
- happened to open at random a copy of Book IV of Clarián de Landanís, also a work never mentioned by Cervantes
- problems of style, oral and written, so that we still know only through intuition the extent to which Cervantes
- The other alternative -if one assumes that Cervantes’ acquaintance with the romances of chivalry was
- It is also clear, even from those titles that are explicitly mentioned in the Quijote, that Cervantes
- We may well pause a moment to wonder how and where Cervantes was able to read these books, since he was
- have had trouble obtaining these books in La Mancha, no more a cultural center then than it is now, so Cervantes
- All this leads to the suggestion that Cervantes might not have purchased the books himself, but rather
- This would be even more likely if it is true that Cervantes «discovered» the romances of chivalry not
- But even if Cervantes knew this, the convoluted conversations («intricadas razones»), which were the
- McCready, «Cervantes and the Caballero Fonseca», MLN, 73 (1958), 33-35, because he opened the book at
- In fact, aside from Cervantes, it is only mentioned by some moralists whose acquaintance with it was
- various aspects of the work, though in neither of these is the question of the work’s influence on Cervantes
- Edwin Place’s «Cervantes and the Amadís», Hispanic Studies in Honor of Nicholson B.
- Formatos:
-
Resultado número:2 Estudio crítico
- Título:
- Who Read the Romances of Chivalry? / by Daniel Eisenberg - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
- Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946-
- Portales:
- Figuras del Hispanismo Visitar sitio web | Libros de caballerías Visitar sitio web
- Materias:
- Novela de caballería Siglo 16º -- Historia y crítica | Caballeros y caballería
- Fragmentos 'cervantes' en la obra : (13 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- de Boecia in 1602 (written before 1600; see Luis Astrana Marín, Vida ejemplar y heroica de Miguel de Cervantes
- Cervantes' unnamed friend of the Prologue to Part I is more specific: "Esta vuestra escritura no mira
- I, 50; Cervantes, El vizcaíno fingido, p. 530 of the edition of Francisco Ynduráin, BAE, 156 (Madrid:
- Furthermore, considering the tone of the Prologue to Part I, and the narrow interpretation Cervantes'
- Whether or not he speaks for Cervantes,35 he is presented as a sober and serious man, deeply conceraed
- particular social class.38 This is spelled out 35 Bruce Wardropper maintains that he does not, in "Cervantes
- Wardropper is supported, on different grounds, by Alban Forcione, Cervantes, Aristotle, and the Persiles
- Spanish Siglo de Oro," Studies in the Renaissance, 4 (1957), 190-200; Américo Castro, El pensamiento de Cervantes
- merely meaning "todo aquel que no sabe," it is true that the romances were read by the vulgo. 37 en Cervantes
- Aside from a passage in the prologue to the Quijote of Avellaneda, obviously based on the passage in Cervantes
- as readers of romances of chivalry, in the Florisando, Book VI of the Arnadís series, a work which Cervantes
- Perhaps it was in the Duke of Béjar's library, if there was a collection of romances of chivalry, that Cervantes
- Cervantes signs himself criado in the dedications to the Conde de Lemos (as does Sancho in his letter
- Formatos:
Filtros de la búsqueda
- Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946- 2 [Eliminar filtro]
- 1973 2 [Eliminar filtro]