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Celestina and the Human Condition in Early Modern Spain and Italy (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,276
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Celestina and the Human Condition in Early Modern Spain and Italy (Hardcover)
Series: Monografias A
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Explores Celestina's role as a key interlocutor in European
literature and thought in the context of debates about the human
condition. Winner of the 2015 Publication Prize awarded by the
Association of Hispanists of Great Britain and Ireland. Celestina
by Fernando de Rojas is a canonical work of late medieval Spanish
literature and one ofthe earliest European "best-sellers". However,
while we have clear evidence of its popularity and influence,
scholarship has not adequately answered the question of why it
continued to hold such appeal for early modern audiences.This book
explores Celestina's role as a key interlocutor in European
literature and thought; it argues that the work continued to be
meaningful because it engaged with one of the period's defining
preoccupations: the human condition, an idea often conceptualised
in pro et contra debates about the misery and dignity of man.
Taking an ideological and comparative approach that focuses on
Celestina's reception in sixteenth-century Spain and Italy, it
reads Rojas's work against a network of texts that were translated
and printed concurrently in both peninsulas yet which have not
previously been examined in depth or detail alongside it, including
Baldassare Castiglione'sIl Cortegiano, Fernan Perez de Oliva's
Dialogo de la dignidad del hombre, and Pietro Aretino's Vita delle
puttane. Each chapter explores themes common to sixteenth-century
debates about the human condition, such as self-knowledge,
self-fashioning, the formative role of language, the tension
between freedom and constraint, as well as the access to knowledge
provided by vernacular fiction in the context of early modern
censorship. Rachel Scott is a Postdoctoral Research Associate at
King's College London.
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