La narratividad de Sancho Panza en el segundo «Quijote»
- Statement of Responsibility:
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Esteva de Llobet, María Dolores
- Hlavní autor:
- Formát:
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Journal article
- Jazyk:
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Spanish; Castilian
- Forma / Žánr:
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text (article)
- Vydáno:
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2018
- V:
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Hipogrifo: Revista de Literatura y Cultura del Siglo de Oro ISSN 2328-1308 Vol. 6, Nº. 2, 2018, pags. 63-73
- Předmětová hesla:
- Annotation:
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Both heroes, don Quixote and Sancho Panza, have the ability to narrate themselves, don Quixote in the first part and Sancho in the second Quixote, in Barataria, and under the authority of the Duke. As Grilli says about the first Quixote «broadly speaking we can describe three skills of don Quixote "writer, orator and representative"» (2007, p. 40). And I affirm the same about Sancho, in the second Quixote. Behind the structure of the second part, appears its true protagonist, Sancho, who also narrates his tale as a good squire that has achieved his dream. An experience, fantastic and terrible at the same time, to be the governor of an ínsula, as his master had promissed him. He dramatises it and represents it on his govern according to an upright principle based on virtue and practical wisdom. Morover, he proves to be "a preacher" of Trento's moral and of the Counter-Reformation spirit, uncovering the immorality and corruption of Barataria during the ruling of the Duke. Sancho also writes his own novel, because don Quixote relinquishes the thrill for narrative and the leading role to Sancho, when he, as a knight and protagonist, has lost all his yearnings and perspectives.