From the Amadises to the Quixotes: sequels and cycle in Cervantes and Avellaneda
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.13136/2284-2667/51Keywords:
chivalric romances, cycles, sequels, Amadís, Don Quixote, Cervantes, AvellanedaAbstract
This work studies the intertextual relationships established between the sequels of Cervantes’ Quixote (1605): that of Avellaneda (1614) and Cervantes’ own sequel (1615). This article seeks to understand the intertextual relationships in the sequels of Don Quixote with regard to the cycles of Castilian chivalric romances (libros de caballerías), especially the Amadís de Gaula cycle. This cycle was the lengthiest and most successful Castilian chivalric cycle and its works were well-known by Cervantes and Avellaneda. Therefore, this work studies how the intertextual relationships of the aforementioned cycles influenced those of the sequels of Don Quixote.
El presente trabajo analiza las relaciones intertextuales de las continuaciones del Quijote (1605) de Cervantes: la de Avellaneda (1614) y la del propio Cervantes (1615). El artículo se enfoca en entender dichas relaciones entre los Quijotes a partir de los ciclos de los libros de caballerías, en particular el del Amadís de Gaula. El ciclo de Amadís de Gaula, bien conocido por Cervantes y Avellaneda, fue el más extenso y exitoso de los libros de caballerías castellanos del siglo XVI. Por ello, este trabajo estudia la influencia de las relaciones intertextuales del ciclo amadisiano en los vínculos que establecen entre sí las continuaciones del Quijote.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2016 Daniel Gutiérrez Trápaga
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Authors must attend to the following conditions:- Authors will mantain the copyright of their work and leave to the journal first publishing rights, simultaneously licensed by a Creative Common License - Attribution - No Commercial Use that permits other researchers to share the work indicating the intellectual property of the author and the first publishing in this journal not for commercial use.
- Authors can adhere to other license agreements not exclusive to the distribution of the published version of their work (for example: include it in an institutional archive or publish it in a monografic book), with the agreement of indicating that the first publishing belongs to this journal.
- Authors can disseminate their work (for example in institutional repositories or their personal website) before and during the submission procedure, as it can lead to advantageous exchanges and citations of the work (see also, The Effect of Open Access).