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151

See Edward C. Riley, Cervantes's Theory of the Novel (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1962), pp. 205-212.

 

152

In an illuminating article on Galdós' experiments with the autonomy of his protagonist in El amigo Manso, John Kronik has also touched upon the fictional self-recreation of don Lope. «El amigo Manso and the Game of Fictive Autonomy», Anales Galdosianos, 12 (1977), p. 74. Riley makes the general observation that «the autonomous characters of Pérez Galdós... are anticipated by Quixote and Sancho» (op. cit., p. 47).

 

153

Doña Josefina inverts don Quijote's tendency to transform prosaic windmills and peasant girls into castles and princesses. Instead, she confuses her theatrical passions with mundane landlords or furniture movers (p. 354).

 

154

Tristana thus offers yet another example of a familiar Galdosian type, the writer of «folletines» who believes in the reality of his own formulaic text.

 

155

Raphaël, op. cit., p. 20.

 

156

Sinnigen, op. cit., p. 286. In a recent study, Peter Bly has similarly noted with surprise an «indifference to the political/historical frame of contemporary society» in Tristana. Galdós's Novel of the Historical Imagination, Liverpool Monographs in Hispanic Studies, No. 2 (Liverpool: Francis Cairns, 1983), p. 165.

 

157

Praising the novel's ending in which Tristana capitulates to the role of housewife and «beata», Clarín wrote that it was «lo más natural de veras» through its representation of «un alma como hay muchas en nuestro tiempo». «Tristana», in Galdós (Madrid: Renacimiento, 1912), p. 252. It is likely that Galdós incorporated elements of Clarín's own tragicomic vision of adultery into Tristana. The Calderonian honor theme, of course, had been ironically recast several years earlier in La Regenta, where it was both called to mind and subverted by the figure of Víctor Quintanar, a Calderón enthusiast who finds his innocent theatrical passion manipulated into a real-life duel and fatal shooting.

 

158

Harry Levin, The Gates of Horn: A Study of Five French Realists (New York: Oxford University Press, 1966), p. 56.

 

159

Roland Barthes, Writing Degree Zero, trans. Annette Lavers and Colin Smith (Boston: Beacon Press, 1970), p. 38.

 

160

Pérez Galdós, Obras completas, V, ed. F. C. Sáinz de Robles (Madrid, 1950), 1545. All references to Tristana are to this edition.

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