Cervantes’ Architectures


Book Description

Cervantes’ Architectures is the first book dedicated to architecture in Cervantes’ prose fiction. At a time when a pandemic is sweeping the world, this book reflects on the danger outside by concentrating on the role of enclosed structures as places where humans may feel safe, or as sites of beauty and harmony that provide solace. At the same time, a number of the architectures in Cervantes trigger dread and claustrophobia as they display a kind of shapelessness and a haunting aura that blends with the narrative. This volume invites readers to discover hundreds of edifices that Cervantes built with the pen. Their variety is astounding. The narrators and characters in these novels tell of castles, fortifications, inns, mills, prisons, palaces, towers, and villas which appear in their routes or in their conversations, and which welcome them, amaze them, or entrap them. Cervantes may describe actual buildings such as the Pantheon in Rome, or he may imagine structures that metamorphose before our eyes, as we come to view one architecture within another, and within another, creating an abyss of space. They deeply affect the characters as they feel enclosed, liberated, or suspended or as they look upon such structures with dread, relief, or admiration. Cervantes' Architectures sheds light on how places and spaces are perceived through words and how impossible structures find support, paradoxically, in the literary architecture of the work.




La plenitud de Miguel de Cervantes


Book Description

La biografía de Cervantes está plagada de mitos, de leyendas, de lugares comunes. Así desde el siglo XVIII y así también en nuestros días. Muchos de estos mitos, leyendas y lugares comunes nacieron de la falta de datos y documentos en sus orígenes, de la necesidad de imponer una determinada imagen sobre la vida de Cervantes para defender la genialidad y la supremacía de su Don Quijote. En esta última entrega de su excelente biografía cervantina, el catedrático José Manuel Lucía Megías, rescata al hombre Miguel de Cervantes en los últimos años de su vida, los que van desde la publicación de la primera parte del Quijote, en el Valladolid de 1604, hasta los primeros años del éxito del Persiles, en el Madrid de 1617. Años cruciales en la vida de Cervantes, que se convierte, año tras año, en una vida de papel, una vida en que verá la luz un programa literario único en los Siglos de Oro, que ha quedado ensombrecido por el éxito posterior del Quijote. Lucía Megías, en esta original indagación, ofrece una nueva mirada sobre el gran genio literario que fue Cervantes, un genio más allá de sus aventuras quijotescas, un genio que fue capaz de reivindicarse como narrador y como poeta alegórico y dramático; un autor que gozó del éxito de sus lectores, como lo muestran las continuas reediciones de las Novelas ejemplares y del Persiles en contraste con el fracaso editorial de la segunda parte del Quijote. ¿Un inédito Miguel de Cervantes? Más bien, el Cervantes de siempre, pero ahora estudiado con todas sus luces y sombras, con su capacidad de trascender la literatura de su tiempo.




Cervantine Blackness


Book Description

There is no shortage of Black characters in Miguel de Cervantes’s works, yet there has been a profound silence about the Spanish author’s compelling literary construction and cultural codification of Black Africans and sub-Saharan Africa. In Cervantine Blackness, Nicholas R. Jones reconsiders in what sense Black subjects possess an inherent value within Cervantes’s cultural purview and literary corpus. In this unflinching critique, Jones charts important new methodological and theoretical terrain, problematizing the ways emphasis on agency has stifled and truncated the study of Black Africans and their descendants in early modern Spanish cultural and literary production. Through the lens of what he calls “Cervantine Blackness,” Jones challenges the reader to think about the blind faith that has been lent to the idea of agency—and its analogues “presence” and “resistance”—as a primary motivation for examining the lives of Black people during this period. Offering a well-crafted and sharp critique, through a systematic deconstruction of deeply rooted prejudices, Jones establishes a solid foundation for the development of a new genre of literary and cultural criticism. A searing work of literary criticism and political debate, Cervantine Blackness speaks to specialists and nonspecialists alike—anyone with a serious interest in Cervantes’s work who takes seriously a critical reckoning with the cultural, historical, and literary legacies of agency, antiblackness, and refusal within the Iberian Peninsula and the global reaches of its empire.




A Frequency Dictionary of Spanish


Book Description

A Frequency Dictionary of Spanish has been fully revised and updated, including over 500 new entries, making it an invaluable resource for students of Spanish. Based on a new web-based corpus containing more than 2 billion words collected from 21 Spanish-speaking countries, the second edition of A Frequency Dictionary of Spanish provides the most expansive and up-to-date guidelines on Spanish vocabulary. Each entry is accompanied with an illustrative example and full English translation. The Dictionary provides a rich resource for language teaching and curriculum design, while a separate CD version provides the full text in a tab-delimited format ideally suited for use by corpus and computational linguistics. With entries arranged both by frequency and alphabetically, A Frequency Dictionary of Spanish enables students of all levels to get the most out of their study of vocabulary in an engaging and efficient way.




De Los Nombres de Cristo


Book Description




Seven Nights


Book Description

The incomparable Borges delivered these seven lectures in Buenos Aires in 1977; attendees were treated to Borges' erudition on the following topics: Dante's The Divine Comedy, Nightmares, Thousand and One Dreams, Buddhism, Poetry, The Kabbalah, and Blindness.










Global Goods and the Spanish Empire, 1492-1824


Book Description

Drawing upon economic history, cultural studies, intellectual history and the history of science and medicine, this collection of case studies examines the transatlantic transfer and transformation of goods and ideas, with particular emphasis on their reception in Europe.