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Index 315 Adamson, Hoebel, 70 Alemán, Mateo, 7, 41–42; his Guzmán de Alfarache, 45ff Allen, John J., 268 Alvarez Amell, D., 34 Amadís. See Don Quixote See Don Quixote See ambivalence: in Erasmus’s Praise of Folly, 89; in the Lazarillo, 44; of the madman , 88; of the old sacred, 7, 76, 78 antihero, 45, 66, 73, 78–79, 117, 177, 267, 270, 289, 305 Arias, J., 51 Ariosto, 255 Aristotle, 34, 35, 67, 254; on imitation and learning, 58, 248; on Oedipus, 15; on poetry and history, 257; on poetry and history, 257; on poetry and history Poetics, 13 Asensio, E., 67 Auden, W. H., 136, 148, 157 Auden, W. H., 136, 148, 157 Auden, W Augustine, Saint: Confessions, 56–61, 291 Avalle Arce, J. B., 199 Avellaneda’s Quixote, 21ff Ayala, Francisco, 188 Bacon, Francis, 3, 254 Bakhtin, M., 10, 62, 72–79 Balthasar, Hans Urs von, 60 Bateson, Gregory, 166 Bateson, Gregory, 166 Bateson, Gregory Bellinger, Charles K., 131 Bembo, Pietro, 198–99 Bercé, Ives-Marie, 69, 71 Bjornson, Richard, 81 Bloom, Harold, 177 books of chivalry, 37, 112, 113, 125, 134, books of chivalry, 37, 112, 113, 125, 134, books of chivalry 163, 178, 218, 220, 228, 230, 303 Brancaforte, Benito, 51–52 Calasso, Roberto, 39 Calderón de la Barca, Pedro, 80, 145, 249, 251, 298–99 Camoens, 6 carnival, 21, 66–72, 77, 79 Caro-Baroja, Julio, 68–69 Castro, Américo, 33, 119–22, 125–26, 129–31, 174–76, 222, 237 catharsis, 59–60. See also Christ’s sacrifice Cavillac, Michel, 67 Cavillac, Michel and Cécile, 54 Christ’s sacrifice: not a cathartic tragedy, Christ’s sacrifice: not a cathartic tragedy, Christ’s sacrifice: not a cathartic tragedy or mimetic spectacle, 50–51; resists poetic fictionalization, 60 Close, Anthony, 8 Close, Anthony, 8 Close, Anthony compassion, 9–11, 27, 32, 39, 56, 59–60, 91, 96–97, 107, 217, 231, 272, 290, 291, 294, 302, 303; compassionate vs. poetic view, 114–19 conversion, 113; in Guzmán de Alfarache, 41–54; in Saint Augustine’s Cofessions, 56–58 Cros, Edmond, 21, 65–66, 68 Darbord, Michel, 49 deception, 8, 154; self deception, 28, 119, 200, 239 desacralization: and the “hermetic” nature of the novel, 38; Christian, 4,6; deprives poetic fiction of its primitive power, 251; grants the individual his own voice, 79; not a literary or formal process, 40; uproots the mechanism of expulsion, 102 desire: based on frustrated love, 200, 226; blind to its own mimetic character , 247; called “metaphysical,” 208; causes insecurity, 195; contagious, 27; essential to literary fiction, 30, 119, 128; fictionalizes and constrains reality , 248; is envious and jealous, 196; mediated by rival desire, 184, 203, 239; of the crowd, 29–30, 119; of the poet, 249; predictable, 212, 248; scandalized , 237; self-contradictory, 207 Don Quixote (the character): “mad in patches,” 97; and mad Cardenio, 94; emblematic figure of the fiction writer, 249; his apparent singularity , 29, 283; his imitation of Amadís, 153–58; his lack of malice, 117; his loss of freedom, 255; his madness: is contagious, 282ff; compared with Macbeth’s, 111–13; rooted in desire, 128; in search of obstacles, 214; inherent failure, 216–17; his knightly desire same as pastoral desire, 220; neither hero nor antihero, 10; snobism, 218– 19; vs. Alonso Quijano, 28; vs. Don Diego de Miranda, 160 Don Quixote (the novel): and the picaresque novel, 7; compared to Oedipus the King, 14–21; historical symbol, 8; humility and greatness, 3; its literary attraction different from its depth, 289–90; its novelty, 2; not structured as an expulsion, 9; prophetic character , 3, 8; relationship between novel and character, 36, 39 Dostoyevski, F. M., 84–85 Dudley, E., 2 Dunn, Peter N., 44, 46–47, 53–54, 62, 65, 83 Dupuy, Jean-Pierre, 95 envy, 78, 157, 163, 165–66, 178, 180, 185, 190, 193, 196, 304; in Quevedo, 83–85. See also Unamuno, and the envy of Cain epic model, 6–8, 11 Epicurus, 169, 173 Euripides, 17 Exemplary Novels: La gitanilla, 121; Rinconete y Cortadillo, 121; La ilustre fregona , 121; El licenciado vidriera, 84, 90; El amante liberal, 260; El celoso extremeño, 255, 304 Fielding, Henry, 2 folklore: transition to literature, 43ff fools, 8, 21, 67, 69, 87, 92, 283, 285; “fools for Christ,” 88–89 Forcione, Alban K., 176, 257, 260 Foucault, Michel, 26, 92–93, 101–8, 111–13 freedom: and providence, 253–60; fragile , 262; from desire in the...

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