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Lopes Arcadia: A Self-Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Marsha S. Collins*
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Abstract

Lope de Vega's pastoral romance Arcadia (1598) presents a fictionalized self-portrait of the author looking back on himself as a younger man, and, at the same time, constitutes a refashioning of the artist into a cultured poet articulating his own poetics. Lope employs the oneiric potential of pastoral to reshape the past imaginatively, even as he engages creatively with pastoral conventions to execute a virtuoso performance as a poet and establish himself as a serious artist who merits the esteem and patronage of the Spanish court. As a result, Arcadia is an artful, complex, and highly idiosyncratic work that reveals Lope's predilection for literary innovation and experimentation, and undermines the notion of pastoral as a staid genre resistant to change. In the process of reshaping pastoral conventions Lope claims demiurgic, visionary powers for poets, likening such powers to those of the Creator himself

Type
Studies
Copyright
Copyright © Renaissance Society of America 2004

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