Selecciona una palabra y presiona la tecla d para obtener su definición.
 

41

For a discussion of the translatio studii in relationship to sixteenth-century Spanish poetics and empire, see Ignacio Navarrete, Orphans of Petrarch: Poetry and Theory in the Spanish Renaissance (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994), 15-31. (N. from the A.)

 

42

Herrero García, ed. cit., 44. (N. from the A.)

 

43

Ibid., 822. (N. from the A.)

 

44

Croce, 180-183. (N. from the A.)

 

45

Ibid., 189-193 [sic]; Rodríguez Marín, ed. cit., 392. (N. from the A.)

 

46

Elias L. Rivers, «Genres and Voices in the Viaje del Parnaso», On Cervantes: Essays for L. A. Murillo, ed. James A. Parr (Newark, Delaware: Juan de la Cuesta-Hispanic Monographs, 1991), 209-211 [sic]. (N. from the A.)

 

47

As Louis Marin theorizes, «The city map is a 'utopic' insofar as it reveals a plurality of places whose incongruity lets us examine the critical spaces of ideology» (Utopics: The Semiologocal Play of Textual Spaces [Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press International, 1990], 201). (N. from the A.)

 

48

Sebastián Covarrubias Orozco, Tesoro de la lengua castellana o española, ed. Felipe C. R. Maldonado (Madrid: Castalia, 1994), 350. (N. from the A.)

 

49

Pedro de Répide, Las calles de Madrid, ed. Federico Romero (Madrid: Afrodisio Aguado, 1971). 509-510. (N. from the A.)

 

50

For various literary references to the pendientes of the court, see Herrero García, ed. cit., 378-379. For a description of the palace's mentidero, see Répide, 455. (N. from the A.)