Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Cervantes's Exemplary Prologue
- 2 Enchantment and Irony: Reading La gitanilla
- 3 The Play of Desire: El amante liberal and El casamiento engañoso y El coloquio de los perros
- 4 Language as Object of Representation in Rinconete y Cortadillo
- 5 Now you see it, now you … see it again? The Dynamics of Doubling in La española inglesa
- 6 Soldiers and Satire in El licenciado Vidriera
- 7 Exemplary Rape: The Central Problem of La fuerza de la sangre
- 8 Remorse, Retribution and Redemption in La fuerza de la sangre: Spanish and English Perspectives
- 9 Free-Thinking in El celoso extremeño
- 10 Performances of Pastoral in La ilustre fregona: Games within the Game
- 11 Cervantine Traits in Las dos doncellas and La señora Cornelia
- 12 The Peculiar Arrangement of El casamiento engañoso and El coloquio de los perros
- 13 Eutrapelia and Exemplarity in the Novelas ejemplares
- 14 ‘Entre parejas anda el juego’ / ‘All a Matter of Pairs’: Reflections on some Characters in the Novelas ejemplares
- Appendix I Synopses
- Appendix II Further Reading
- Index
14 - ‘Entre parejas anda el juego’ / ‘All a Matter of Pairs’: Reflections on some Characters in the Novelas ejemplares
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 Cervantes's Exemplary Prologue
- 2 Enchantment and Irony: Reading La gitanilla
- 3 The Play of Desire: El amante liberal and El casamiento engañoso y El coloquio de los perros
- 4 Language as Object of Representation in Rinconete y Cortadillo
- 5 Now you see it, now you … see it again? The Dynamics of Doubling in La española inglesa
- 6 Soldiers and Satire in El licenciado Vidriera
- 7 Exemplary Rape: The Central Problem of La fuerza de la sangre
- 8 Remorse, Retribution and Redemption in La fuerza de la sangre: Spanish and English Perspectives
- 9 Free-Thinking in El celoso extremeño
- 10 Performances of Pastoral in La ilustre fregona: Games within the Game
- 11 Cervantine Traits in Las dos doncellas and La señora Cornelia
- 12 The Peculiar Arrangement of El casamiento engañoso and El coloquio de los perros
- 13 Eutrapelia and Exemplarity in the Novelas ejemplares
- 14 ‘Entre parejas anda el juego’ / ‘All a Matter of Pairs’: Reflections on some Characters in the Novelas ejemplares
- Appendix I Synopses
- Appendix II Further Reading
- Index
Summary
It has not gone unnoticed by students of Cervantes's literary production that a great many of his characters appear in pairs, something that is frequently the case not only in the Novelas ejemplares but also in other Cervantine texts. I am referring to characters who either appear together from the very start, or who, in the course of events, become an inseparable pair, difficult to disassociate from each other. The following are some examples of such characters: Don Quijote and Sancho, the priest and the barber, the housekeeper and niece, Marcela and Grisóstomo, the two Benedictine monks who appear in Chapter 8 of Don Quijote, Part I; Persiles and Sigismunda, etc. In the Novelas ejemplares, as is immediately obvious, the list is extensive and, on occasion, anticipated by the very titles of the stories themselves (Rinconete y Cortadillo [Rinconete and Cortadillo], Las dos doncellas [The Two Damsels], Novela y coloquio que pasó entre Cipión y Berganza [Novel and Dialogue that Took Place Between Cipión and Berganza]) but, most significantly, this phenomenon is present in almost all of them: Ricardo and Mahamut, Carriazo and Avendaño, don Juan de Gamboa and don Antonio de Isunza… This kind of character presentation extends right down to some very minor figures who are not even given names and whose role in the novelas is sometimes quite insignificant. This preference for duality, which is clearly evidenced in the way in which many of the characters are presented, is also visible in other aspects of the novelas, such as the structure, as is the case in La señora Cornelia (Lady Cornelia) whose central monologues – those of Cornelia and Lorenzo –, as Peter Dunn has shown, divide the action into two parts, and whose dénouement is complicated by a final obstacle resulting from the division in the action: don Juan, don Antonio and don Lorenzo journey towards Ferrara, while doña Cornelia and the housekeeper (ama) make their way to Piova. It is even more obvious in Las dos doncellas.
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- Information
- A Companion to Cervantes's Novelas Ejemplares , pp. 283 - 302Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2005