William Childers
Transnational Cervantes
William Childers
Transnational Cervantes
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Theoretically eclectic and methodologically innovative, Transnational Cervantes opens up many avenues for research and debate, aiming to bring Cervantes' writings forward into the brave new world of our postcolonial age.
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Theoretically eclectic and methodologically innovative, Transnational Cervantes opens up many avenues for research and debate, aiming to bring Cervantes' writings forward into the brave new world of our postcolonial age.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 334
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Mai 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 153mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 340g
- ISBN-13: 9781442615113
- ISBN-10: 1442615117
- Artikelnr.: 40788401
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 334
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. Mai 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 153mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 340g
- ISBN-13: 9781442615113
- ISBN-10: 1442615117
- Artikelnr.: 40788401
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
By William Childers
Preface: Transnationalizing Cervantes
Acknowledgments
Part One. Decolonizing Cervantes
1. Introduction: The Colonized Imagination
2. Internal Colonialism in Early Modern Spain
3. ‘Under my cloak, I kill the king’: Reading and Resistance
4. La Mancha as Borderland
1. Cervantes and lo real maravilloso
2. Carpentier, Forcione, and the ‘Persiles’
3. The Marvellous as a Contested Site in European Culture
4. Ontological Ambiguity and Generic Hybridity in Cervantes
5. Cide Hamete Benengeli: The Other Within
6. Conclusion
Part Two. Cervantes’ Transnational Romance
7. Pilgrimage and Social Change in Persiles y Sigismunda
8. Feliciana de la Voz: A Secularized Miracle Story
9. ‘Según es cristiana la gente’: Antonio de Villaseñor’sReturn toQuintanar de
la Orden
10. Conclusion: The Reader as Pilgrim
11. Turning Spain Inside Out
12. Mapping the Fictional Realms of Persiles y Sigismunda
13. Transitions: Toward a Poetics of Social Restructuring
14. A Nation Traversed by Its Borders
Part Three. Cervantes Now
15. Remembering the Future: Cervantes and the New Moroccan Immigration to Spain
16. The New Hispano-Muslims
17. Splicing the Broken Thread
18. An Internal Colony in Sixteenth-Century Spain
19. Cervantes’ Moriscas: Yesterday and Tomorrow
20. Chicanoizing Don Quixote
21. ‘Launch against the Windmills!’
22. Three Readers Rewriting
23. From the Morsico Jofor to the Ghost Dance Cult
24. Don Quixote, the Novel, and the Postcolonial World
25. Conclusion: Cervantes and Shakespeare: Toward a Canon of Spanglish
Literature
26. Colonial Quixotes
27. Shakespeare, Race, and the Spanish Inquisition
28. Toward an Americanist Reading of Persiles y Sigismunda
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Acknowledgments
Part One. Decolonizing Cervantes
1. Introduction: The Colonized Imagination
2. Internal Colonialism in Early Modern Spain
3. ‘Under my cloak, I kill the king’: Reading and Resistance
4. La Mancha as Borderland
1. Cervantes and lo real maravilloso
2. Carpentier, Forcione, and the ‘Persiles’
3. The Marvellous as a Contested Site in European Culture
4. Ontological Ambiguity and Generic Hybridity in Cervantes
5. Cide Hamete Benengeli: The Other Within
6. Conclusion
Part Two. Cervantes’ Transnational Romance
7. Pilgrimage and Social Change in Persiles y Sigismunda
8. Feliciana de la Voz: A Secularized Miracle Story
9. ‘Según es cristiana la gente’: Antonio de Villaseñor’sReturn toQuintanar de
la Orden
10. Conclusion: The Reader as Pilgrim
11. Turning Spain Inside Out
12. Mapping the Fictional Realms of Persiles y Sigismunda
13. Transitions: Toward a Poetics of Social Restructuring
14. A Nation Traversed by Its Borders
Part Three. Cervantes Now
15. Remembering the Future: Cervantes and the New Moroccan Immigration to Spain
16. The New Hispano-Muslims
17. Splicing the Broken Thread
18. An Internal Colony in Sixteenth-Century Spain
19. Cervantes’ Moriscas: Yesterday and Tomorrow
20. Chicanoizing Don Quixote
21. ‘Launch against the Windmills!’
22. Three Readers Rewriting
23. From the Morsico Jofor to the Ghost Dance Cult
24. Don Quixote, the Novel, and the Postcolonial World
25. Conclusion: Cervantes and Shakespeare: Toward a Canon of Spanglish
Literature
26. Colonial Quixotes
27. Shakespeare, Race, and the Spanish Inquisition
28. Toward an Americanist Reading of Persiles y Sigismunda
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Preface: Transnationalizing Cervantes
Acknowledgments
Part One. Decolonizing Cervantes
1. Introduction: The Colonized Imagination
2. Internal Colonialism in Early Modern Spain
3. ‘Under my cloak, I kill the king’: Reading and Resistance
4. La Mancha as Borderland
1. Cervantes and lo real maravilloso
2. Carpentier, Forcione, and the ‘Persiles’
3. The Marvellous as a Contested Site in European Culture
4. Ontological Ambiguity and Generic Hybridity in Cervantes
5. Cide Hamete Benengeli: The Other Within
6. Conclusion
Part Two. Cervantes’ Transnational Romance
7. Pilgrimage and Social Change in Persiles y Sigismunda
8. Feliciana de la Voz: A Secularized Miracle Story
9. ‘Según es cristiana la gente’: Antonio de Villaseñor’sReturn toQuintanar de
la Orden
10. Conclusion: The Reader as Pilgrim
11. Turning Spain Inside Out
12. Mapping the Fictional Realms of Persiles y Sigismunda
13. Transitions: Toward a Poetics of Social Restructuring
14. A Nation Traversed by Its Borders
Part Three. Cervantes Now
15. Remembering the Future: Cervantes and the New Moroccan Immigration to Spain
16. The New Hispano-Muslims
17. Splicing the Broken Thread
18. An Internal Colony in Sixteenth-Century Spain
19. Cervantes’ Moriscas: Yesterday and Tomorrow
20. Chicanoizing Don Quixote
21. ‘Launch against the Windmills!’
22. Three Readers Rewriting
23. From the Morsico Jofor to the Ghost Dance Cult
24. Don Quixote, the Novel, and the Postcolonial World
25. Conclusion: Cervantes and Shakespeare: Toward a Canon of Spanglish
Literature
26. Colonial Quixotes
27. Shakespeare, Race, and the Spanish Inquisition
28. Toward an Americanist Reading of Persiles y Sigismunda
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Acknowledgments
Part One. Decolonizing Cervantes
1. Introduction: The Colonized Imagination
2. Internal Colonialism in Early Modern Spain
3. ‘Under my cloak, I kill the king’: Reading and Resistance
4. La Mancha as Borderland
1. Cervantes and lo real maravilloso
2. Carpentier, Forcione, and the ‘Persiles’
3. The Marvellous as a Contested Site in European Culture
4. Ontological Ambiguity and Generic Hybridity in Cervantes
5. Cide Hamete Benengeli: The Other Within
6. Conclusion
Part Two. Cervantes’ Transnational Romance
7. Pilgrimage and Social Change in Persiles y Sigismunda
8. Feliciana de la Voz: A Secularized Miracle Story
9. ‘Según es cristiana la gente’: Antonio de Villaseñor’sReturn toQuintanar de
la Orden
10. Conclusion: The Reader as Pilgrim
11. Turning Spain Inside Out
12. Mapping the Fictional Realms of Persiles y Sigismunda
13. Transitions: Toward a Poetics of Social Restructuring
14. A Nation Traversed by Its Borders
Part Three. Cervantes Now
15. Remembering the Future: Cervantes and the New Moroccan Immigration to Spain
16. The New Hispano-Muslims
17. Splicing the Broken Thread
18. An Internal Colony in Sixteenth-Century Spain
19. Cervantes’ Moriscas: Yesterday and Tomorrow
20. Chicanoizing Don Quixote
21. ‘Launch against the Windmills!’
22. Three Readers Rewriting
23. From the Morsico Jofor to the Ghost Dance Cult
24. Don Quixote, the Novel, and the Postcolonial World
25. Conclusion: Cervantes and Shakespeare: Toward a Canon of Spanglish
Literature
26. Colonial Quixotes
27. Shakespeare, Race, and the Spanish Inquisition
28. Toward an Americanist Reading of Persiles y Sigismunda
Notes
Works Cited
Index