Resultados de búsqueda (2)
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1
Estudio crítico
- Título:
-
Cervantes' Don Quijote Once Again : An Answer to J. J. Allen / Daniel Eisenberg - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
-
Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946-
- Portales:
-
Miguel de Cervantes
Visitar sitio web
| Figuras del Hispanismo
Visitar sitio web
- Mat. aut.:
-
Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de (1547-1616) -- Don Quijote de la Mancha -- Crítica textual
- Fragmentos
'cervantes' en la obra
: (32
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
Espejo de príncipes y cavalleros, Clásicos Castellanos (Madrid: Espasa-Calpe, 1970, a romance which Cervantes
-
in QIb), recent criticism has tended to diminish the importance of the Quijote both in relation to Cervantes
-
It has finally been realized that the enigmatic Persiles was considered by Cervantes to be his masterpiece
-
suggested
by the well-known statement in the dedication to Part II of the Quijote; see Tilbert Stegmann, Cervantes
-
Forcione, Cervantes, Aristotle, and the «Persiles» (Princeton University Press, 1970
) and Cervantes
-
Persiles y Sigismunda» (Princeton University Press, 1972), although each of these goes beyond explaining Cervantes
-
' reasons for thinking the Persiles superior to saying that Cervantes in fact accomplished
more with
-
I would merely raise the familiar question of Cervantes' intent in doing so, a valid question which Allen
-
It may well be true that Cervantes has done something unprecedented, and with philosophical implications
-
It is merely a curiosity, unless it can be established that it was Cervantes' intent to imply the things
-
It is not unlike the question of whether Cervantes intended a deliberate confusion over the names of
-
Sancho knows in Part I, but not in Part II, what an
ínsula is, must this be due to conscious intent on Cervantes
-
To reject the simpler possibility that these and similar items are merely accidents resulting from Cervantes
-
' haste and disinclination to
revise16, is to conclude the existence of an anachronistic Cervantes, interested
-
in ontological problems which were just not considered in the Spain of his day, or an Unamunian Cervantes
-
Furthermore, there are numerous episodes in Part II which show that Cervantes' attitude toward his protagonist
-
Cervantes' Don Quijote Once Again: An Answer To J. J. Allen
-
Cervantes' Don Quijote Once Again: An Answer To J. J.
-
By examining the means,
both stylistic and contextual, in which Cervantes guides the reader toward the
-
position he desires, Allen concludes that Cervantes intended Don Quijote to be seen in Part I as
«
-
such a stumbling block as it has been with the Quijote.
14
As Mandel points out, Cervantes
-
is a very literal-minded writer (or, in Mandel's words,
«Cervantes meant what he said»; p. 157).
-
I have seen no satisfactory explanation of why, if Cervantes had another, hidden purpose, he so often
-
Function of the Norm in Don Quixote», MPh, 55 (1958), 154-63
4
In his chapter «Cervantes
-
andaluza, Lazarillo), not a concern of fiction in the same way as today, was of secondary interest to Cervantes
-
example of this is during his governorship, when he miraculously displays the wisdom of Solomon to allow Cervantes
-
The ridiculous overuse of proverbs in Part II (discounting the possibility, to my mind unlikely, that Cervantes
-
because of the unfamiliarity with the sixteenth-century romances of chivalry which were the subject of Cervantes
-
stated purpose is not its true or primary one and that one is therefore justified in speculating on Cervantes
-
Parenthetically, I would venture to suggest that Cervantes' primary purpose in writing both parts of
-
the Quijote is nothing more nor less than parody of the romances of chivalry, as Cervantes declares it
-
chivalry were popular much later than is usually realized15, and it is not necessary to assume that Cervantes
- Formatos:
-
-
Resultado número:2
Estudio crítico
- Título:
-
"Dígalo Portugal, Barcelona y Valencia" : Una nota sobre la popularidad de "Don Quijote" / Daniel Eisenberg - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
-
Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946-
- Portales:
-
Miguel de Cervantes
Visitar sitio web
| Figuras del Hispanismo
Visitar sitio web
- Mat. aut.:
-
Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de (1547-1616) -- Don Quijote de la Mancha -- Crítica textual
- Fragmentos
'cervantes' en la obra
: (8
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
No menciona las ediciones que Cervantes
conocía, las de Juan de la Cuesta, y tampoco es nada
correcto
-
Acaso Cervantes dijo Amberes pensando en Bruselas, como se ha
sugerido, pero importa poco.
-
Es evidente que Cervantes no
había visto estas ediciones, y sólo había
oído rumores, y no sorprende,
-
imprimieron fuera de Castilla, con propósito de evitar el
pagar derechos al dueño de la licencia de Cervantes
-
Tras el comentario de Carrasco está el enojo de Cervantes
con estas ediciones no autorizadas, por las
-
En
fin, Cervantes sacó la figura de 12.000 del aire; era una
conjetura, basada en los más nebulosos informes
-
Carrasco...
quizá se quedó corto», Riquer: «Sansón Carrasco nos da la primera
"bibliografía" del Quijote» (Cervantes
-
La prueba la
tenemos en lo que dice Cervantes, por boca de Sansón
Carrasco...».
- Formatos:
-
Filtros de la búsqueda
- Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946- 2 [Eliminar filtro]
- 1974 2 [Eliminar filtro]
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1 Estudio crítico
- Título:
- Cervantes' Don Quijote Once Again : An Answer to J. J. Allen / Daniel Eisenberg - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
- Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946-
- Portales:
- Miguel de Cervantes Visitar sitio web | Figuras del Hispanismo Visitar sitio web
- Mat. aut.:
- Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de (1547-1616) -- Don Quijote de la Mancha -- Crítica textual
- Fragmentos 'cervantes' en la obra : (32 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- Espejo de príncipes y cavalleros, Clásicos Castellanos (Madrid: Espasa-Calpe, 1970, a romance which Cervantes
- in QIb), recent criticism has tended to diminish the importance of the Quijote both in relation to Cervantes
- It has finally been realized that the enigmatic Persiles was considered by Cervantes to be his masterpiece
- suggested by the well-known statement in the dedication to Part II of the Quijote; see Tilbert Stegmann, Cervantes
- Forcione, Cervantes, Aristotle, and the «Persiles» (Princeton University Press, 1970 ) and Cervantes
- Persiles y Sigismunda» (Princeton University Press, 1972), although each of these goes beyond explaining Cervantes
- ' reasons for thinking the Persiles superior to saying that Cervantes in fact accomplished more with
- I would merely raise the familiar question of Cervantes' intent in doing so, a valid question which Allen
- It may well be true that Cervantes has done something unprecedented, and with philosophical implications
- It is merely a curiosity, unless it can be established that it was Cervantes' intent to imply the things
- It is not unlike the question of whether Cervantes intended a deliberate confusion over the names of
- Sancho knows in Part I, but not in Part II, what an ínsula is, must this be due to conscious intent on Cervantes
- To reject the simpler possibility that these and similar items are merely accidents resulting from Cervantes
- ' haste and disinclination to revise16, is to conclude the existence of an anachronistic Cervantes, interested
- in ontological problems which were just not considered in the Spain of his day, or an Unamunian Cervantes
- Furthermore, there are numerous episodes in Part II which show that Cervantes' attitude toward his protagonist
- Cervantes' Don Quijote Once Again: An Answer To J. J. Allen
- Cervantes' Don Quijote Once Again: An Answer To J. J.
- By examining the means, both stylistic and contextual, in which Cervantes guides the reader toward the
- position he desires, Allen concludes that Cervantes intended Don Quijote to be seen in Part I as «
- such a stumbling block as it has been with the Quijote. 14 As Mandel points out, Cervantes
- is a very literal-minded writer (or, in Mandel's words, «Cervantes meant what he said»; p. 157).
- I have seen no satisfactory explanation of why, if Cervantes had another, hidden purpose, he so often
- Function of the Norm in Don Quixote», MPh, 55 (1958), 154-63 4 In his chapter «Cervantes
- andaluza, Lazarillo), not a concern of fiction in the same way as today, was of secondary interest to Cervantes
- example of this is during his governorship, when he miraculously displays the wisdom of Solomon to allow Cervantes
- The ridiculous overuse of proverbs in Part II (discounting the possibility, to my mind unlikely, that Cervantes
- because of the unfamiliarity with the sixteenth-century romances of chivalry which were the subject of Cervantes
- stated purpose is not its true or primary one and that one is therefore justified in speculating on Cervantes
- Parenthetically, I would venture to suggest that Cervantes' primary purpose in writing both parts of
- the Quijote is nothing more nor less than parody of the romances of chivalry, as Cervantes declares it
- chivalry were popular much later than is usually realized15, and it is not necessary to assume that Cervantes
- Formatos:
-
Resultado número:2 Estudio crítico
- Título:
- "Dígalo Portugal, Barcelona y Valencia" : Una nota sobre la popularidad de "Don Quijote" / Daniel Eisenberg - Registro bibliográfico
- Autor:
- Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946-
- Portales:
- Miguel de Cervantes Visitar sitio web | Figuras del Hispanismo Visitar sitio web
- Mat. aut.:
- Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de (1547-1616) -- Don Quijote de la Mancha -- Crítica textual
- Fragmentos 'cervantes' en la obra : (8 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- No menciona las ediciones que Cervantes conocía, las de Juan de la Cuesta, y tampoco es nada correcto
- Acaso Cervantes dijo Amberes pensando en Bruselas, como se ha sugerido, pero importa poco.
- Es evidente que Cervantes no había visto estas ediciones, y sólo había oído rumores, y no sorprende,
- imprimieron fuera de Castilla, con propósito de evitar el pagar derechos al dueño de la licencia de Cervantes
- Tras el comentario de Carrasco está el enojo de Cervantes con estas ediciones no autorizadas, por las
- En fin, Cervantes sacó la figura de 12.000 del aire; era una conjetura, basada en los más nebulosos informes
- Carrasco... quizá se quedó corto», Riquer: «Sansón Carrasco nos da la primera "bibliografía" del Quijote» (Cervantes
- La prueba la tenemos en lo que dice Cervantes, por boca de Sansón Carrasco...».
- Formatos:
Filtros de la búsqueda
- Eisenberg, Daniel, 1946- 2 [Eliminar filtro]
- 1974 2 [Eliminar filtro]