International audienceThrough a few instances of close reading, this paper considers anew a very much studied subject : Don Quixote’s madness. Focusing on four French and English translations of the 17th century, two early “faithful” ones and two later, “free” ones, it examines the reception of Quixotism in the first century following its creation : what kind of cause-effect relationship is involved in the origin of Quixote’s madness as it is narrated in the first chapter of the novel ? How did the translators deal with the polysemic charge of some of the Spanish words linked with that specific madness ?Cet article se saisit à nouveau d’un sujet maintes fois étudié par la critique littéraire comme par les psychologues et historiens : la fol...
International audienceThe opening of the 17th century saw the advent of Cervantes’s Quixote, a wande...
There is nothing new in saying that everyone in Germany knows the Quixote, and that one can find tra...
This study examines the problem of the perception of Don Quixote in Russia in the eighteenth and nin...
International audienceThrough a few instances of close reading, this paper considers anew a very muc...
Candace Beutell Gardner ABSTRACT THE RECEPTION OF DON QUIXOTE IN 17TH- AND 18TH- CENTURY GERMANY AND...
Candace Beutell Gardner ABSTRACT THE RECEPTION OF DON QUIXOTE IN 17TH- AND 18TH- CENTURY GERMANY AND...
In the seventeenth century there is a clash between two types of state organization in Europe, the m...
Scholars have long since identified a quixotic mode in fiction, acknowledging the widespread influen...
Scholars have long since identified a quixotic mode in fiction, acknowledging the widespread influen...
International audienceIs it true that "Don Quixote" mainly owes its European success in the 17th cen...
Program year: 1994/1995Digitized from print original stored in HDRMadness and irrationality appear a...
International audienceThe opening of the 17th century saw the advent of Cervantes’s Quixote, a wande...
International audienceIs it true that "Don Quixote" mainly owes its European success in the 17th cen...
International audienceIs it true that "Don Quixote" mainly owes its European success in the 17th cen...
International audienceIs it true that "Don Quixote" mainly owes its European success in the 17th cen...
International audienceThe opening of the 17th century saw the advent of Cervantes’s Quixote, a wande...
There is nothing new in saying that everyone in Germany knows the Quixote, and that one can find tra...
This study examines the problem of the perception of Don Quixote in Russia in the eighteenth and nin...
International audienceThrough a few instances of close reading, this paper considers anew a very muc...
Candace Beutell Gardner ABSTRACT THE RECEPTION OF DON QUIXOTE IN 17TH- AND 18TH- CENTURY GERMANY AND...
Candace Beutell Gardner ABSTRACT THE RECEPTION OF DON QUIXOTE IN 17TH- AND 18TH- CENTURY GERMANY AND...
In the seventeenth century there is a clash between two types of state organization in Europe, the m...
Scholars have long since identified a quixotic mode in fiction, acknowledging the widespread influen...
Scholars have long since identified a quixotic mode in fiction, acknowledging the widespread influen...
International audienceIs it true that "Don Quixote" mainly owes its European success in the 17th cen...
Program year: 1994/1995Digitized from print original stored in HDRMadness and irrationality appear a...
International audienceThe opening of the 17th century saw the advent of Cervantes’s Quixote, a wande...
International audienceIs it true that "Don Quixote" mainly owes its European success in the 17th cen...
International audienceIs it true that "Don Quixote" mainly owes its European success in the 17th cen...
International audienceIs it true that "Don Quixote" mainly owes its European success in the 17th cen...
International audienceThe opening of the 17th century saw the advent of Cervantes’s Quixote, a wande...
There is nothing new in saying that everyone in Germany knows the Quixote, and that one can find tra...
This study examines the problem of the perception of Don Quixote in Russia in the eighteenth and nin...