A Novel Without Boundaries: Sensing Don Quixote 400 Years Later, Edited by Carmen García de la Rasilla and Jorge Abril Sánchez
Table of Contents
Prologue: Idleness and the Cervantine Ideal; Bruce R. Burningham
Introduction; Carmen García de la Rasilla
Section One: Readings
Don Quixote, Part Two: Arthurian Fiction, Violence and Decline; Jesús Botello López-Canti
Alexander’s Gordian Knots: Images of Conflict, Decline and Fall in Don Quixote, Part Two; Frederick A. De Armas
Cervantes as Reader of the First Part of Don Quixote; Roberto González Echevarría (Translated by Gregory Baum)
The Don Quixote of Edgar Allan Poe: Reader, Narrator, Detective, Critic; Fernando González de León
Images from the Reading: Generative and Functional Aspects of the Visual in Don Quixote; Carmen García de la Rasilla
Section Two: Contexts and Legacies
Thomas Shelton’s English Translation of the Second Part of Don Quixote (1620): A Study of Facts and Problems; Francisco José Borge López
Windmills and Water: The Narrative Instability and Don Quixote in England; Gregory Baum
Ostentation and Theatrical Festivities in Camacho’s Wedding; Rosa Helena Chinchilla
Gresham’s Law, Inflation, Price Controls, Subjective Value Theory, and Usury in Miguel de Cervantes’s Don Quixote de la Mancha; Eric C. Graf
Don Quixote Never Dies in Brazil: Performative Appropriations of Don Quixote 2.74 in Contemporary Brazilian Theatre; Rogelio Miñana
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Series: Documentación cervantina, #39
ISBN: 978-1-58871-287-5 (HB, 220 pp.) $55