In this Book

  • Literature Among Discourses: The Spanish Golden Age
  • Book
  • Wlad Godzich and Nicholas Spadaccini, EditorsIntroduction by Wlad Godzich and Nicholas Spadaccini
  • 1986
  • Published by: University of Minnesota Press
summary

Literature Among Discourses was first published in 1986. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.

Literature in the High Middle Ages referred to anything written. Those who institutionalized the study of literature in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries ignored this medieval meaning, and literary history, especially in the hands of teachers, became what Wlad Godzich and Nicholas Spadaccini call a peregrination from one masterpiece to another. In Spanish literature, a cluster of such masterpieces came to be identified quite early, constituting a siglo de oro,a Golden Age. These outstanding works of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries became a paradigm of achievement for the German romantics who formulated the project of literary history; for this reason, the authors of Literature among Discourses have chosen to begin their own exploratory voyage with the Spanish Golden Age.

Their intent is not simply to complete the historical record by studying "popular" texts alongside the canonical works, nor is it to establish these texts as a treasure trove of raw materials awaiting entry into and transformation by the masterpiece. They ask, rather, why the masterpiece came to occupy its place—how specific texts (or classes of texts) came to be differentiated from other discursive entities and labeled "literature." Taken together, their essays reveal an era in which literature is never a given, but is instead constantly being forged in a manner as complex as the social dynamic itself.

Contributors include: the editors, José Antonio Maravall, Michael Nerlich, Ronald Sousa, Constance Sullivan, Jenaro Talens, José Luís Canet, and Javier Herrero. Wlad Godzich is director of the Center for Humanistic Studies, and Nicholas Spadaccini, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, at the University of Minnesota.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Copyright
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-vi
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. vii-viii
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  1. Introduction: Toward a History of 'Literature'
  2. Wlad Godzich, Nicholas Spadaccini
  3. pp. ix-xvi
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  1. Chapter 1. From the Renaissance to the Baroque: The Diphasic Schema of a Social Crisis
  2. José Antonio Maravall
  3. pp. 3-40
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  1. Chapter 2. Popular Culture and Spanish Literary History
  2. Wlad Godzich, Nicholas Spadaccini
  3. pp. 41-61
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  1. Chapter 3. Toward a Nonliterary Understanding of Literature: Reflections on the Notion of the "Popular"
  2. Michael Nerlich
  3. pp. 62-81
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  1. Chapter 4. Gender Markers in Traditional Spanish Proverbs
  2. Constance Sullivan
  3. pp. 82-102
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  1. Chapter 5. Literature versus Theatricality: On the Notion of the "Popular" and the Spanish Culture of the Golden Age
  2. Jenaro Talens, José Luis Canet
  3. pp. 103-115
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  1. Chapter 6. "Vos outros tambem cantai por vosso uso acostumado": Representation of the Popular in Gil Vicente
  2. Ronald Sousa
  3. pp. 116-131
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  1. Chapter 7. The Stubborn Text: Calisto's Toothache and Melibea's Girdle
  2. Javier Herrero
  3. pp. 132-150
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  1. Notes
  2. pp. 151-170
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  1. Contributors
  2. pp. 171-174
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 175-181
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