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Women Of The Prologue: Imitation, Myth, And Magic In Don Quixote, Carolyn Nadeau
Women Of The Prologue: Imitation, Myth, And Magic In Don Quixote, Carolyn Nadeau
Carolyn A Nadeau
From Google Books: Women of the Prologue: Imitation, Myth, and Magic in Don Quixote I examines the significance of the sources cited for female characterization in the prologue and their relationship to Cervantes's writing style. When the anonymous friend suggests that Cervantes include Guevara's Lamia, Laida, and Flora; Ovid's Medea; Homer's Calypso; and Virgil's Circe as models for specific types of women, he not only foregrounds the significance of these classical women for the female characters in the text, but also partakes in the controversial debate of the value of imitatio at the historic juncture of Humanist and Modernist perspectives …
Contrapunteo Estadounidense/Latinoamericano De Los Estudios Culturales, George Yudice
Contrapunteo Estadounidense/Latinoamericano De Los Estudios Culturales, George Yudice
George Yúdice
No abstract provided.
Cultural Policy, George Yudice, Toby Miller