Don Quixote
Rate it:
Open Preview
Read between March 3 - March 30, 2023
0%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Bought for $2 on August 2, 2019 just because, and finally reading Part 1 in March 2023 for an Osher class with Álvaro Antonio Bernal, PhD (Pitt J-town). First session: intro. Second session: the first 10 chapters Third session: chapters 11-20 Fourth session: chapters 21-31 Fifth session: Final chapters 32-52 The course will cover a variety of topics, including: * Cervantes and the world of Don Quixote * What makes Don Quixote so special? * Spanish Golden Age * The concept of Chivalric Romances * Basic Literary concepts applied to the novel– Polyphony and Intertextuality * The risk of translations * The Spain of Don Quixote * Exploring the meaning of some adventures * The game of the authorship * Indoor vs outdoor settings * Fantasy, Dreams, and Decline * Metafiction * Humor Fortunately (and sometimes unfortunately), everyone quickly realizes that Don Quixote is mad. E.g., “being crazy he would be absolved even if he killed them all.” p. 33 Proverb / proverbial - 85 of them Terrible / O gawd Sanchismos The laws of chivalry Metafiction - second author, lacunae in the text Blame, always fins a way to blame Sancho beats regularly, by DQ’s enemies, and by DQ QUESTIONS: Did Cervantes read Italian? (e.g., Ariosto - p. 47) YES: https://doi.org/10.1017/CCOL0521663210.003 (Cambridge Companion to Cervantes, ch. 3 C. and the Italian Renaissance) Relationship of Castilian to Spanish to Catalan to ? Is there a “formal” or old-fashioned Spanish to suggest what English does with its “thee and thou” constructions when D.Q. is speaking formally? Note some folk, e.g., the innkeeper folk pp.111, 113, cannot understand him. Cf. DQ’s formalisms with Sancho p. 150 fn.4 It becomes a relief when an encounter does not end in violence. But meanwhile, I am compulsively drawn on to see how he gets out of one scrape and into another. Despite the slow pacing and thematic repetitions, the adventures and conversations evince an imaginative fecundity worthy of L. Frank Baum and JRRT. Marcela as feminist philosopher, ch.14 pp. 97-100 COMEDY OF ERRORS: the fight at the inn, pp. 115 The flocks of sheep, pp. 125-131 concludes with projectile vomit MOCK: Chivalric romance Egotistical gentry sycophantic servants Storytelling144 99 bottles of beer on the wall 146 Sancho mocks DQ’s rhetoric of courage, 150 RELIGION: Roman Catholic - ritualistic and habitual; incantatory and magical; rhetorical and superstitious Priests rarely permit themselves to go hungry p. 140 **** Occasional narrator’s (Cervantes) intrusions about what he’s reading in the translated “manuscript” and hence bound to include. E,g., pp. 129, After being beaten soundly repeatedly, DQ still attacks, and when he does, Sancho says, “No doubt about it, this master of mine is as courageous and brave as he says.” p. 137
Nancy liked this
2%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Bought In August 2019 and I’m glad to have it! Originally published in two parts, in 1605 and 1615, a simple farmer, Sancho Panza, as the squire, often employs a unique, earthy wit in dealing with Don Quixote's rhetorical monologues on knighthood, already considered old-fashioned at the time. Don Quixote, in the first part of the book, does not see the world for what it is and prefers to imagine that he is living out a knightly story. While Part One was mostly farcical, the second half is more serious and philosophical about the theme of deception. Cervantes' meta-fictional device was to make even the characters in the story familiar with the publication of Part One, as well as with an actually published, fraudulent Part Two. Read for class with Álvaro Antonio Bernal with Osher, March 14-April 11, 2023. Satire: Inquisition of books in the library scene pp. 45-54 Knights are more useful than priests, p. 88
Nancy liked this
2%
Flag icon
For Unamuno, Alonso Quixano is the Christian saint, while Don Quixote is the originator of the actual Spanish religion, Quixotism.
2%
Flag icon
Cervantes, like Shakespeare, gives us a secular transcendence.
Nancy liked this
2%
Flag icon
When he ceases to assert his autonomy, there is nothing left except to be Alonso Quixano the Good again,
2%
Flag icon
Nabokov is very illuminating on this in his Lectures on Don Quixote,
2%
Flag icon
Why does Cervantes subject Don Quixote to the physical abuse of part I and the psychic tortures of part II?
2%
Flag icon
Twelfth Night is comedy unsurpassable, and on the stage we are consumed by hilarity at Malvolio’s terrible humiliations.
2%
Flag icon
When we reread the play, we become uneasy, because Malvolio’s socioerotic fantasies echo in virtually all of us.
2%
Flag icon
Lucidity keeps breaking in, reminding him that Dulcinea is his own supreme fiction, transcending an honest lust for the peasant girl Aldonza Lorenzo.
2%
Flag icon
Erich Auerbach
2%
Flag icon
Sorrowful Face’s
Penn Hackney
For many translations, see: https://franklycurious.com/wp/2015/10/03/don-quixote-and-his-sorry-face-translation-comparison/ For other translation issues and examples, see: https://franklycurious.com/wp/don-quixote-english/
Nancy liked this
3%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
why "discreet"? question
3%
Flag icon
person begotten in a prison,
3%
Flag icon
Tranquility,
3%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Quijote, modern spelling of Quixote, is a monotypic genus of gastropods (slugs and snails) belonging to the monotypic family Quijotidae. The only species is Quijote cervantesi.
3%
Flag icon
you have a soul in your body and a will as free as anyone’s, and you are in your own house, where you are lord, as the sovereign is master of his revenues,
Nancy liked this
3%
Flag icon
that old legislator, the public,
3%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Sinile
3%
Flag icon
lacking all erudition and doctrine,
3%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Haha - proving he is familiar with all the authorities.
3%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Haha - he has the right connections, but chooses not to rely on them. N
3%
Flag icon
Don Quixote should remain buried in the archives of La Mancha
3%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Haha
3%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Simile haha
3%
Flag icon
bring clarity to the chaos of my confusion?”
Penn Hackney
Alliteration in Spanish too? Trans. Question
4%
Flag icon
Pallida mors aequo pulsat pede pauperum tabernas, Regumque turres.
Nancy liked this
4%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Haha - it’s in the Valley of Elah recounted in 1 Samuel 17, mocking pedantry again.
4%
Flag icon
Lamia,
4%
Flag icon
the couple of ounces of Tuscan that you know
Penn Hackney
Question
4%
Flag icon
perhaps someone will be naive enough to believe you have consulted all of them
Penn Hackney
Haha - that’s what a I do.
4%
Flag icon
no one will try to determine if you followed them or did not follow them, having nothing to gain from that.
Penn Hackney
Haha
4%
Flag icon
all of it is an invective against books of chivalry,
Penn Hackney
A fair summary? Question
4%
Flag icon
whose unbelievable absurdities do not enter into the calculations of factual truth,
Nancy liked this
4%
Flag icon
preach to anyone, weaving the human with the divine, which is a kind of cloth no Christian intelligence should wear.
4%
Flag icon
mimesis
Penn Hackney
See Mimesis: The Representation of Reality in Western Literature (1946, tr. ) by Erich Auerbach, chapter 15 of which deals with Don Quixote.
4%
Flag icon
this work of yours intends only to undermine the authority and wide acceptance that books of chivalry have in...
This highlight has been truncated due to consecutive passage length restrictions.
4%
Flag icon
reading your history should move the melancholy to laughter, increase the joy of the cheerful, not irritate the simple, fill the clever with admiration for its invention, not give the serious reason to scorn it, and allow the prudent to praise it.
4%
Flag icon
keep your eye on the goal of demolishing the ill-founded apparatus of these chivalric books,
4%
Flag icon
the most chaste lover and most valiant knight seen in those environs for many years.
4%
Flag icon
the great mass of inane books of chivalry.
4%
Flag icon
gentleman from La Manch-    whose idle reading of nov-    caused him to lose his reas-:
4%
Flag icon
Orlando Furio-,
4%
Flag icon
AMADÍS OF GAUL
4%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
mimesis
5%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
El CID’s horse
5%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Haha - he eats oats and hay!
5%
Flag icon
Our gentleman was approximately fifty years old;
5%
Flag icon
the authors who write of this matter,
Penn Hackney
Source
5%
Flag icon
Penn Hackney
Haha - when even his name is in dispute.
« Prev 1 3 13