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Quixotic Frescoes: Cervantes and Italian Renaissance Art

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Quixotic Frescoes: Cervantes and Italian Renaissance Art

Frederick A. de Armas
University of Toronto Press © 2006

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World Rights
344pp /45 halftones
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As a young man, Miguel de Cervantes left his home in Spain and travelled extensively through Italy, experiencing all that the Italian Renaissance had to offer. In his later writings, Cervantes sought to recapture his experience through literature, and literary critics have often pointed to Italian texts as models for Cervantes? writing. The art of the period, however, has seldom been examined in this context.

Focusing on Don Quixote, Frederick A. de Armas unearths links between Cervantes? text and frescoes, paintings, and sculptures by Italian artists such as Cambiaso, Michelangelo, Raphael, and Titian. His study seeks to re-engage the critics of today by formulating the link between Cervantes and the Renaissance through an interdisciplinary dialogue that establishes a new set of models and predecessors. This dialogue is used to explore a variety of issues in Cervantes including the absence of a single guiding pictorial program, the doubling of archaeological reconstruction, and the use of ekphrasis as allusion, interpolation, and an integral component of the action. Quixotic Frescoes delves into the politics of imitation, self-censorship, religious ideology expressed through the pictorial, as well as the gendering of art as reflected in Cervantes? work. This detailed and exhaustive study is an invaluable contribution to both Hispanic and Renaissance studies.

Frederick A. de Armas is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in Humanities and chair of the Department of Romance Languages and Literature at the University of Chicago.



Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Preface

  1. The Exhilaration of Italy
  2. A Museum of Memories: From Numancia to La Galatea
  3. At School with the Ancients: Raphael
  4. The Fourfold Way: Raphael
  5. Textual Terribilitį: Michelangelo
  6. The Merchants of Trebizond: Luca Cambiaso
  7. Drawing Decorum: Titian
  8. Dancing with Giants: Philostratus
  9. A Mannerist Theophany / A Cruel Teichoskopia: Pontormo and Parmigianino
  10. Dulcinea and the Five Maidens: Zeuxis
  11. Love?s Architecture: Giulio Romano
  12. The Last Enchantment: Epilogue

Notes

Works Cited

Index 2





University of Toronto Press acknowledges the financial support for its publishing activities of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP).

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