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Tragicomedy and Novelistic Discourse in Celestina Dorothy Sherman Severin

Tragicomedy and Novelistic Discourse in Celestina By Dorothy Sherman Severin

Tragicomedy and Novelistic Discourse in Celestina by Dorothy Sherman Severin


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Summary

The late fifteenth-century Spanish masterpiece Celestina is one of the world's classics. In this important study, Dorothy Sherman Severin investigates how Fernando de Rojas' work in dialogue, which parodies earlier genres, is a precursor of the modern novel.

Tragicomedy and Novelistic Discourse in Celestina Summary

Tragicomedy and Novelistic Discourse in Celestina by Dorothy Sherman Severin

The late fifteenth-century Spanish masterpiece Celestina is one of the world's classics. In this important study, Dorothy Sherman Severin investigates how Fernando de Rojas' work in dialogue, which parodies earlier genres, is a precursor of the modern novel. In Celestina, the hero Calisto parodies the courtly lover, the heroine Melibea lives through classical examples and popular students' knowledge, the bawd and go-between Celestina deals a blow to the world of wisdom literature, and Melibea's father Pleberio gives his own gloss on the lament. There is also a fatal clash between two literary worlds, that one of the self-styled courtly lover (the fool) and the prototype picaresque world of the Spanish Bawd and her mentors (the rogues). The voices of Celestina are parodic, satiric, ironic and occasionally tragic, and it is in their discourse that the dialogue world of the modern novel is born. In order to make this book accessible to a wider English-speaking readership, quotations from the text are accompanied by English translations, mainly from the seventeenth-century English version by James Mabbe.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: Celestina and novelistic discourse; 2. The prefatory material: the author's ambivalent intentions; 3. Genre and the parody of courtly love; 4. From parody to satire: clerical and estates satire; 5. Verbal humour and the legacy of stagecraft; 6. The rhetorical shift from comedy to tragedy: ironic foreshadowing and premonitions of death; 7. Is Melibea a tragic figure?; 8. Pleberio's lament, Carcel de Amor, and the Corbacho; 9. Conclusion: Rojas' ambivalence towards literature; Notes; Bibliography; Index.

Additional information

NLS9780521122832
9780521122832
052112283X
Tragicomedy and Novelistic Discourse in Celestina by Dorothy Sherman Severin
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2009-11-12
156
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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