Calderón de la Barca’s El divino Orfeo (c.1634), first published by Pablo Cabañas in 1948, makes use of a mytho-allegorical narrative to tell the story of the creation, fall, and redemption of humankind. This study offers fresh insights into Calderón’s handling of the mythological sources used in the creation of his Christian allegorical play beyond the eponymous Orpheus and Eurydice. Specifically, I focus upon Calderón’s interaction with four additional mythological episodes: creation from Book 1 of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Orpheus in the Garden of the Hesperides, the abduction of Proserpina, and the entry of Aeneas and the Sibyl of Cumae into the Underworld in Book 6 of Virgil’s Aeneid. These myths are shown to form part of a syncretic a lo ...
The playwrights of Europe contributed immensely to the flowering of cultural and artistic expression...
The Middle English lai Sir Orfeo combines elements from the Greco-Roman, Christian, and Northern Eur...
Olympiodorus\u27 Commentary on Plato\u27s Phaedo I.3-6 has been the linchpin of the reconstructions ...
My dissertation examines concepts of creative agency in early modern thought and baroque poetics, wi...
The author of this article begins with a comparative summary of the two versions of the sacramental ...
In the critical bibliography referred to Lope de Vega, the scholar usually finds the image of this a...
The Spanish playwright Calderòn de la Barca (1600-1681) shares the same religious vision with the Si...
A maioria dos estudos sobre os autos sacramentais realizados ao longo da história não considera as t...
Because of their universal and artistic nature, the classical myths lend themselves well to use in l...
Because of their universal and artistic nature, the classical myths lend themselves well to use in l...
Because of their universal and artistic nature, the classical myths lend themselves well to use in l...
Because of their universal and artistic nature, the classical myths lend themselves well to use in l...
In classical mythology Astraea, the goddess of justice, chastity, and truth, was the last of the imm...
Because of their universal and artistic nature, the classical myths lend themselves well to use in l...
The playwrights of Europe contributed immensely to the flowering of cultural and artistic expression...
The playwrights of Europe contributed immensely to the flowering of cultural and artistic expression...
The Middle English lai Sir Orfeo combines elements from the Greco-Roman, Christian, and Northern Eur...
Olympiodorus\u27 Commentary on Plato\u27s Phaedo I.3-6 has been the linchpin of the reconstructions ...
My dissertation examines concepts of creative agency in early modern thought and baroque poetics, wi...
The author of this article begins with a comparative summary of the two versions of the sacramental ...
In the critical bibliography referred to Lope de Vega, the scholar usually finds the image of this a...
The Spanish playwright Calderòn de la Barca (1600-1681) shares the same religious vision with the Si...
A maioria dos estudos sobre os autos sacramentais realizados ao longo da história não considera as t...
Because of their universal and artistic nature, the classical myths lend themselves well to use in l...
Because of their universal and artistic nature, the classical myths lend themselves well to use in l...
Because of their universal and artistic nature, the classical myths lend themselves well to use in l...
Because of their universal and artistic nature, the classical myths lend themselves well to use in l...
In classical mythology Astraea, the goddess of justice, chastity, and truth, was the last of the imm...
Because of their universal and artistic nature, the classical myths lend themselves well to use in l...
The playwrights of Europe contributed immensely to the flowering of cultural and artistic expression...
The playwrights of Europe contributed immensely to the flowering of cultural and artistic expression...
The Middle English lai Sir Orfeo combines elements from the Greco-Roman, Christian, and Northern Eur...
Olympiodorus\u27 Commentary on Plato\u27s Phaedo I.3-6 has been the linchpin of the reconstructions ...