This article documents and analyzes the use of the word ‘credit’ and its derivatives in the Persiles. It presents the hypothesis that the frequent and sophisticated use of this word in Cervantes’ last novel is related to the constitution of the subject and the constructions of the self in the early modern period. First, it offers a diachronic and thematic overview of the use of the word in the period 1500-1750, signaling its increase in the era of Cervantes and a notable decrease towards the end of the Golden Age. Secondly, it examines how the hero of the Cervantine novel constitutes and constructs himself relating to his fellow characters through the key word ‘credit’ and its derivatives. We conclude that the author made use of this vocabu...
This article aims to offer a valid hyphotesis about the exegesis of Persiles. This study gives an in...
Saavedra was not Cervantes's last name, nor one that his direct ancestors bore. The writer assumed t...
In the 1599 translation of a poem by Horace one finds: “You who are good, a golden star, will go amo...
The historiography of literary culture often links the Quixote and, by extension, the work of Cervan...
In the present work we have set out to demonstrate that the style of the Persiles is magnificent, if...
This article recovers and analyses the earliest appearances of the term “novel” as the name for a ne...
When talking about the role of descriptive parts in fiction in Quijote (II.18), Cervantes no doubt h...
A selection of Cervantist essays between the centenary and the Civil War, a period which corresponds...
This article is aimed at highlighting the persuasive aspect of maxims and proverbs in Cervantes’ Don...
El subtítulo “historia” asignado a la novela póstuma de Miguel de Cervantes Los trabajos de Persiles...
This article analyzes the structure of El rufián dichoso by Cervantes by parting from the complex co...
The following paper analyzes Cervantes’s last text and literary will. In his prologue to his Trabajo...
Nowadays, it is now widely recognized that the history of accounting is an essential part of economi...
En este artículo se examina un contexto sintáctico muy concreto, las subordinadas completivas del v...
Se analizan los criterios que existían sobre el concepto de “erudición” en el siglo XVII, tomando co...
This article aims to offer a valid hyphotesis about the exegesis of Persiles. This study gives an in...
Saavedra was not Cervantes's last name, nor one that his direct ancestors bore. The writer assumed t...
In the 1599 translation of a poem by Horace one finds: “You who are good, a golden star, will go amo...
The historiography of literary culture often links the Quixote and, by extension, the work of Cervan...
In the present work we have set out to demonstrate that the style of the Persiles is magnificent, if...
This article recovers and analyses the earliest appearances of the term “novel” as the name for a ne...
When talking about the role of descriptive parts in fiction in Quijote (II.18), Cervantes no doubt h...
A selection of Cervantist essays between the centenary and the Civil War, a period which corresponds...
This article is aimed at highlighting the persuasive aspect of maxims and proverbs in Cervantes’ Don...
El subtítulo “historia” asignado a la novela póstuma de Miguel de Cervantes Los trabajos de Persiles...
This article analyzes the structure of El rufián dichoso by Cervantes by parting from the complex co...
The following paper analyzes Cervantes’s last text and literary will. In his prologue to his Trabajo...
Nowadays, it is now widely recognized that the history of accounting is an essential part of economi...
En este artículo se examina un contexto sintáctico muy concreto, las subordinadas completivas del v...
Se analizan los criterios que existían sobre el concepto de “erudición” en el siglo XVII, tomando co...
This article aims to offer a valid hyphotesis about the exegesis of Persiles. This study gives an in...
Saavedra was not Cervantes's last name, nor one that his direct ancestors bore. The writer assumed t...
In the 1599 translation of a poem by Horace one finds: “You who are good, a golden star, will go amo...