22. Don Quixote, Part II: Chapters LIV-LXX (cont.)



Cervantes’ Don Quixote (SPAN 300)

As we approach the end of the novel, Cervantes compresses and combines elements from different types of romances (morisco, Greek, pastoral) in what seems to be an attempt to create a new literary genre; the modern novel. In the episodes in Barcelona, the prank with the talking head makes literal the figure of prosopopeia; Don Quixote’s visit to the printing shop explores the very origin of the book; the sign the boys hang on Don Quixote’s back also reduces him to language. Avellaneda’s misreading of the Quixote coincides with that of the dueñas who punish Sancho, and is also ironically represented in Altisidora’s dream. By taking literature to its limits, by incorporating Avellaneda’s book into the Quixote, by rejecting bookish knowledge in favor of experience, Cervantes seems to point to the idea that there is no position from which to stand outside of the world of fiction. The only way out would be through a voluntary act of the will, equivalent to the one Don Quixote makes after being defeated by the Knight of the White Moon.

00:00 – Chapter 1. Episodes in Barcelona
17:30 – Chapter 2. Avellaneda’s Spurious Quixote
33:42 – Chapter 3. Don Quixote’s Defeat by the Knight of the White Moon
39:01 – Chapter 4. Episodes Leading to the Contagion of Madness from Character to Character
48:11 – Chapter 5. Altisidora’s Infernal Vision
52:57 – Chapter 6. Experience over Bookish Learning

Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: https://open.yale.edu/courses

This course was recorded in Fall 2009.

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