¶ … Quijote
Cervantes' Don Quijote is, above all, the story of a reader. The real question of the novel perhaps is why more readers do not behave like Quijote himself, and attempt to act out the things that they find so engaging in print. I would like to explore the way in which the main character's status as a reader in Cervantes' novel gives some clue to us as readers as to how we ought to behave. It seems evident that Cervantes' strategy in the novel is largely rhetorical and ironic: he uses the language of the books Quijote reads, while imparting an ironic distance to how this language fits into the actual world where Quijote finds himself. But the ultimate result for Cervantes' reader is to get a deeper form of literary enjoyment than Quijote is capable of: we are inside and outside the satisfactions of the storytelling at the same time, while Quijote is trapped inside them.
The first area of Don Quijote's actions as reader that we must explore is that of pure rhetoric. In other words, Quijote's world is, to a large degree, constructed out of language -- he does not need to hallucinate when he can narrate his own passage through the world, and act as the recipient of his own rhetorical strategies. We can see this very clearly in his early invocation in the novel of the lady to whom he has chivalrously pledged his affections, Dulcinea:
"O Princess Dulcinea, mistress of this...
Don Quixote In literature, the intrepid hero Don Quixote decides that his favorite courtly romances are more enthralling than life "outside" books because he did not believe his real life was exiting. Therefore, he thought his life should be like the stories in books. Don Quixote is a character that represents some people in real life who wish their lives were like the stories that they read. He knew he was
Don Quixote, a gaunt, middle-aged gentleman from Spain, is known throughout the world as one of the all-time greatest heroes. In many ways, he is similar to ancient heroes of the past. In other ways, he resembles modern heroes. There are traces of Don Quixote in fiction, films and even comics. Like so many of the heroes of ancient times, including Jesus Christ, Don Quixote lived alone amongst men, as few
Don Quixote is among the most influential novels ever written. It explores the shifting boundaries of truth and illusion. The author is a narrator who self-consciously narrates and makes us constantly aware of his presence and is preoccupied with literary criticism and theory. With his post-modernist tendencies he has become a novelist's novelist par excellence. Often called the first modern novel, Don Quixote originally conceived as a comic satire against the
Don Quixote In the opening of his book Don Quixote, Cervantes claims that Don Quixote goes mad after reading too many novels about the heroic deeds of knights-errant. However, like the old argument of whether the chicken or the age came first, it could be argued that Quixote was going mad and latched onto these books, which he then incorporated into his madness. If this is the case, the problem was
Throughout it all, Don Quixote is trying to live a dream he has of a so-called better time, when Spain was filled with lords, ladies and courtly manners. The bad guys were evil and the good guys were heroes, winning every time. But by the end of the book Don Quixote wakes up from this dream, which wasn't so wonderful after all, and realize things aren't just black and white,
During Cervantes' time, the Spanish Catholic Church saw itself as challenged on all sides. After expelling all Jews who would not convert to Catholicism in 1492, the Spanish crown then became concerned that perhaps some of the conversions were not genuine and that some Jewish converts were still secretly practicing Judaism (1). Part of the Crown's concerns may have stemmed from the fact that part of what eventually became
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