Feminine concerns in contemporary Spanish fiction by women Feminine concerns in contemporary Spanish fiction by women

Feminine concerns in contemporary Spanish fiction by women

Former students of the distinguished professor and scholar provide here a collection of thought-provoking studies touching on a variety of topics, from secular poetry and pastoral prose to Don Quixote and mysticism. "These essays, contributed by fifteen of Elias Rivers' students, are a fitting tribute to a teacher capable of awakening interests and inspiring careers."-Eric W Naylor, Hispania.

  • Cover
  • Index
  • Preface
  • Elias L. Rivers
  • Tradition, Voice and Self in the Love Poetry of Garcilaso
  • Visual and Verbal Modes of Representation in Peribáñez
  • Heart Imagery in Santa Teresa
  • Sannazzaro and Montemayor: Toward a Comparative Study of Arcadia and Diana
  • Sex and the Single Hidalgo: Reflections on Eros in Don Quixote
  • The Semiotics of Poetry and the Golden Age Sonnet
  • Góngora's Parody of Ovide moralisé in La Fábula de Píramo y Tisbe
  • A Hope for Coherence: The New Logic of Meaning in a Text by Lezama
  • Of Monuments and Ashes: Some Remarks on Biographical Patterns
  • The Human Body in Spanish Renaissance and Baroque Poetry: Testing Laín Entralgo's Theories
  • Amarilis's Verse Epistle and Her Love for Lope: Seeing and Hearing
  • A Prologue and Afterword for an Inquiry into Don Quixote, Part I, Chapter 20
  • In the Labyrinth of Self: Character and Role in Calderón's La dama duende
  • The Wound and the Flame: Desire and Transcendence in Quevedo and Saint John of the Cross
  • Six Misogynous Sonnets Attributed to Góngora
  • Epilogue
  • Tabula Gratulatoria

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