Thesis Chapters by vicente puchades ferrer
ABSTRACT:
The beginning of this work is Pítica XI of Pyndarus, when the poet calls Clytemnestra “... more ABSTRACT:
The beginning of this work is Pítica XI of Pyndarus, when the poet calls Clytemnestra “this pitiless woman”. In the century V B.C. she was declared guilty of the death of her husband, the King Agamemnon, when he returned at home after the victory of Troy. The Athenians tragic writers confirm this sentence and she will be remembered forever in this way.
We will travel from Homer to Apollodorus to see the evolution of this character and how the myth has transformed this woman as an example to support the misogyny. In order to reach this objective we need go through the chronology, the familiar genealogy of this woman and the habits and ideas of the heroes who lived around her. We also see how the mythology of heroes times was taken in the democratic cities for building the differences of gender.
Keywords: Mythology, history, Greek literature, gender.
Papers by vicente puchades ferrer
Analecta malacitana: Revista de la Sección de Filología de la Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, 2018
Analecta Malacitana. Revista de la sección de Filología de la Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, 2022
Ovidio y Lorenzo Valla, dos autores separados por catorce siglos, escriben sobre el amor trágico.... more Ovidio y Lorenzo Valla, dos autores separados por catorce siglos, escriben sobre el amor trágico. Sus narraciones comparten argumento y protagonistas: dos jóvenes adolescentes que deciden vivir su amor en libertad, lejos de imposiciones, y terminan en fatal desenlace. Ovidio en sus Metamorfosis incluye la leyenda de Píramo y Tisbe; a su vez, Lorenzo Valla en Historiarum Ferdinandi regis Aragoniae Libri tres introduce la historia que da nombre a la Peña de los Enamorados en Antequera. Trataremos una comparativa con elementos comunes y diferencias como formantes de un canon de Poética histórica.

ACTIO NOVA: Revista de Teoría de la Literatura y Literatura Comparada
El objeto de nuestro estudio es el expediente inquisitorial conservado en el Archivo Histórico Na... more El objeto de nuestro estudio es el expediente inquisitorial conservado en el Archivo Histórico Nacional de Madrid, donde se recogen los tres juicios celebrados en la sede de Cartagena de Indias entre 1623-1636 contra Paula de Eguiluz, una esclava afrodescendiente acusada de brujería. El análisis retórico-literario de las actas presenta una rigurosa estructura forense y a la vez discursiva que traslada de manera ordenada la exposición de unos hechos en dos planos de acción: por un lado, el propio juicio, aristotélicamente articulado en introducción, nudo y desenlace; y por otro, los sucesos que acusada y testigos relatan. Cada plano muestra su particular lenguaje y discurso que tratamos siguiendo las aportaciones tanto de Propp y Bajtín, como de Barthes, Todorov, Even-Zohar, García Berrio y, más recientemente en los trabajos de Albaladejo y Baena, entre otros.
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Thesis Chapters by vicente puchades ferrer
The beginning of this work is Pítica XI of Pyndarus, when the poet calls Clytemnestra “this pitiless woman”. In the century V B.C. she was declared guilty of the death of her husband, the King Agamemnon, when he returned at home after the victory of Troy. The Athenians tragic writers confirm this sentence and she will be remembered forever in this way.
We will travel from Homer to Apollodorus to see the evolution of this character and how the myth has transformed this woman as an example to support the misogyny. In order to reach this objective we need go through the chronology, the familiar genealogy of this woman and the habits and ideas of the heroes who lived around her. We also see how the mythology of heroes times was taken in the democratic cities for building the differences of gender.
Keywords: Mythology, history, Greek literature, gender.
Papers by vicente puchades ferrer
The beginning of this work is Pítica XI of Pyndarus, when the poet calls Clytemnestra “this pitiless woman”. In the century V B.C. she was declared guilty of the death of her husband, the King Agamemnon, when he returned at home after the victory of Troy. The Athenians tragic writers confirm this sentence and she will be remembered forever in this way.
We will travel from Homer to Apollodorus to see the evolution of this character and how the myth has transformed this woman as an example to support the misogyny. In order to reach this objective we need go through the chronology, the familiar genealogy of this woman and the habits and ideas of the heroes who lived around her. We also see how the mythology of heroes times was taken in the democratic cities for building the differences of gender.
Keywords: Mythology, history, Greek literature, gender.