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Sansón Carrasco in Don Quixote's Parody

Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes is a satirical novel published in the early 17th century that parodies medieval chivalric romances. It follows Don Quixote, a country nobleman who believes he is a knight, and his squire Sancho Panza. Don Quixote's "insanity" stems from reading too many romantic tales of chivalry. The novel contrasts Don Quixote's fanciful ideals with the realities of everyday life, creating humorous situations and highlighting the human desire to find meaning through imagination.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
181 views8 pages

Sansón Carrasco in Don Quixote's Parody

Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes is a satirical novel published in the early 17th century that parodies medieval chivalric romances. It follows Don Quixote, a country nobleman who believes he is a knight, and his squire Sancho Panza. Don Quixote's "insanity" stems from reading too many romantic tales of chivalry. The novel contrasts Don Quixote's fanciful ideals with the realities of everyday life, creating humorous situations and highlighting the human desire to find meaning through imagination.

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Elaalaa
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Don Quixote by Cervantes

Don Quixote
Author: Miguel de Cervantes
Culture: Spanish
Date: early 17th c.
Genre: satirical novel
Names/terms to know: Don
Quixote, Sancho Panza,
Dulcinea, Sansón Carrasco,
Marcela, Grisóstomo,
chivalry & pastoralism
Cervantes Background
 Son of a poor doctor, did not
have a humanist education
 Cervantes’ adventurous life:
 Fought in religious wars
 Captured by pirates
 Spent 5 years as a slave
 Held government jobs.

 1604: Don Quixote Part 1


published
 1615: published DQ II.
Don Quixote
 Cervantes combines several
genres into one.
 His initial purpose: to satirize
the romances of chivalry, to
create a parody of a literary
type characterized by
supernatural deeds of valor,
implausible & complicated
adventures, duels, and
enchantments.
 The novel was popular
immediately.
Medieval Chivalry & Pastoral
 Literatura koja je izrazila srednjovjekovni duh viteštva
i romanse je degenerirala Cervantes vrijeme. Njegov
metod prikazivanja najluđih romantičnih romansi: ' da
pokažu kakve izuzetne posledice oni bi vodili čoveka
ludo zalutalim sa njima, kada je ovaj čovek sada
spreman da živi ' u skladu sa svojim uzorcima akcije i
verovanja. ' Pored viteskih romansi, Cervantes
parodije pastoralni roman, sa odelom oko Marcela,
Pastirica koji je nedirnut od strane svojih obožavaca.
Don Quixote’s Mask
 Our hero, Don Quixote, dons the mask of a chivalric
knight to make his life more interesting and bearable.
 We can see the influence of Greek comedy on this
novel: a crazy idea is proposed, and the rest of the
work concerns its working out in the real world.
 The humor lies in the contrast between Don
Quixote’s ideals and the real world around him.
 French Jesuit Francois de la Noue - Warned against
the dangerous influence of chivalric books on the
young - claimed they were as harmful to the young as
Machiavelli was to the old. [Think also Socrates]
Reality
 Don Quixote is not a knight but an impoverished
country landowner.
 His ideals: love as ‘service,’ adventurousness,
loyalty to valor and generosity. Tries to seek out
wrongs and right them, to help those in need, to be
full of valor in honor of his Lady (courtly love).
 Like Greek heroes, he wants his great deeds to be
sung.
 Don Quixote: a wandering hero
 His insanity: caused by reading too many books
about chivalry (literature corrupts)
First Nine Chapters
 Some scholars think these chapters
represent the kernel of a story originally
meant to be just a novella.
 The story breaks off soon after DQ has taken
off again with Sancho Panza as his squire,
fresh from their windmill encounter.

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