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
10 - Performances of Pastoral in La ilustre fregona: Games within the Game
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 is no surprise that pastoral has proved to be one of the more important areas of study for Cervantes scholars. Although it is not a dominant issue in Don Quijote the fact that his first book was a pastoral romance has tempted commentators to explore aspects of his later works by reference to the pastoral ethos, first incorporated in La Galatea. Such a consideration extends to those works, like La ilustre fregona (The Illustrious Kitchen Maid), that at first sight appear removed from sixteenth-century Spanish pastoral fiction. Two factors perhaps have been responsible for this probing for evidence of traces of the genre in unpromising settings. First, there is the nature of La Galatea itself and the way in which it has not yielded to a critical consensus. According to Mary Malcolm Gaylord some critics see it as ‘too pastoral and insufficiently Cervantine’, while others acknowledge that it is ‘quite recognizably its author's work, but imperfectly pastoral’. Little wonder then that Elizabeth Rhodes should refer to it as ‘a text which is categorized as pastoral with some hesitancy’. Secondly there is the protean quality of the term ‘pastoral’. It ranges from the precisely delimiting, as when referring to the competing songs of shepherds, following a Theocritan or Virgilian model, to a definition such as ‘any literature which deals with the complexities of human life against a background of simplicity’. The image of Cervantes as a pioneer, as a ‘modern’ writer, readily encourages the broader acceptance of the term so that there is every reason for viewing works such as La ilustre fregona and La gitanilla (The Little Gypsy Girl) as, if not quite versions of pastoral, then certainly as texts that incorporate it. In the case of the former, the author himself provides the most blatant of nudges and winks at the very start when Carriazo's experience of the picaresque life in the tunny fisheries is couched in terms of the locus amoenus of pastoral.We might mistake the following sentence for a paraphrase of Garcilaso, the opening of such poems as his Canción III or Égloga II: ‘ni el andar a pie le cansaba, ni el frío le ofendía, ni el calor le enfadaba.
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- A Companion to Cervantes's Novelas Ejemplares , pp. 207 - 220Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2005
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