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The Melancholy Void
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 352

The Melancholy Void

Felipe Valencia examines the construction of lyric as a melancholy and masculinist discourse that sings of and perpetrates symbolic violence against the feminine and the female beloved in key texts of Spanish poetry from 1580 to 1620.

A Poetry of Things
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 191

A Poetry of Things

A Poetry of Things considers how cultural objects were used by poets in the years around 1600 - a time of social and economic crisis, but also of remarkable artistic and literary production.

A Companion to Lope de Vega
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 406

A Companion to Lope de Vega

An assessment of the life, work and reputation of Spain's leading Golden Age dramatist

Poiesis and Modernity in the Old and New Worlds
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 334

Poiesis and Modernity in the Old and New Worlds

Poetic making from Cervantes and Gongora to Descartes and Locke

The Age of Subtlety
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 232

The Age of Subtlety

A craze for intricate metaphors, referred to as conceits, permeated all forms of communication in seventeenth-century Italy and Spain, reshaping reality in highly creative ways. The Age of Subtlety: Nature and Rhetorical Conceits in Early Modern Europe situates itself at the crossroads of rhetoric, poetics, and the history of science, analyzing technical writings on conceits by such scholars as Baltasar Gracián, Matteo Peregrini, and Emanuele Tesauro against the background of debates on telescopic and microscopic vision, the generation of living beings, and the boundaries between the natural and the artificial. It contends that in order to understand conceits, we must locate them within the early modern culture of ingenuity that was also responsible for the engineer’s machines, the juggler’s sleight of hand, the wiles of the statesman, and the discovery of truths about nature.

The Miscellany of the Spanish Golden Age
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 204

The Miscellany of the Spanish Golden Age

Taking up the invitation extended by tentative attempts over the past three decades to construct a functioning definition of the genre, Jonathan Bradbury traces the development of the vernacular miscellany in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Spain and Spanish-America. In the first full-length study of this commercially successful and intellectually significant genre, Bradbury underlines the service performed by the miscellanists as disseminators of knowledge and information to a popular readership. His comprehensive analysis of the miscelánea corrects long-standing misconceptions, starting from its poorly-understood terminology, and erects divisions between it and other related genres. Hi...

Polemical Encounters
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 441

Polemical Encounters

This collection takes a new approach to understanding religious plurality in the Iberian Peninsula and its Mediterranean and northern European contexts. Focusing on polemics—works that attack or refute the beliefs of religious Others—this volume aims to challenge the problematic characterization of Iberian Jews, Muslims, and Christians as homogeneous groups. From the high Middle Ages to the end of the seventeenth century, Christian efforts to convert groups of Jews and Muslims, Muslim efforts to convert Christians and Jews, and the defensive efforts of these communities to keep their members within the faiths led to the production of numerous polemics. This volume brings together a wide ...

Garcilaso et la mélancolie
  • Language: fr
  • Pages: 196

Garcilaso et la mélancolie

None

Dramatic Theory in Spain
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 92

Dramatic Theory in Spain

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1925
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Authority, Piracy, and Captivity in Colonial Spanish American Writing
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 197

Authority, Piracy, and Captivity in Colonial Spanish American Writing

Authority, Piracy, and Captivity in Colonial Spanish American Writing examines the intricate bond between poetry and history writing that shaped the theory and practice of empire in early colonial Spanish-American society. The book explores from diverse perspectives how epic and heroic poetry served to construe a new Spanish-American elite of original explorers and conquistadors in Juan de Castellanos’s Elegies of Illustrious Men of the Indies. Similarly, this book offers an interpretation of Castellanos’s writings that shows his critical engagement with the reformist project postulated in Alonso de Ercilla’s LaAraucana, and it elucidates the complex poetic discourse Castellanos create...