El "Tirant lo Blanch" i "D. Quijote de La Mancha"

audiobook

El "Tirant lo Blanch" i "D. Quijote de La Mancha"

by J. (Juan) Givanel Mas

CA·~2 hours·51 chapters

Chapters

51 total
1

Notes del Transcriptor

0:25
2

EL “TIRANT LO BLANCH” I “D. QUIJOTE DE LA MANCHA”

7:11
3

I

0:41
4

II

5:34
5

III

5:40
6

IV

2:44
7

V

2:12
8

VI

2:48
9

VII

1:57
10

VIII

0:44

Description

A meticulous study invites listeners into the early‑twentieth‑century world of literary scholarship, where a passionate devotee of both Don Quixote and Tirant lo Blanch outlines a fresh angle on Cervantes’s masterpiece. The author traces how scholars from Menéndez Pidal to Bowle have long debated the novel’s sources, then moves to a less‑examined influence: the chivalric romance Tirant lo Blanch. By weaving together references to courtly chronicles, popular ballads, and printed editions from Valencia to Valladolid, the essay builds a picture of the texts that likely floated through Cervantes’s mind as he crafted his wandering knight.

In the first act the narrative surveys the prevailing view that Cervantes drew chiefly from medieval romances, then presents compelling evidence that Tirant lo Blanch resonated deeply with him. Detailed comparisons of passages, alongside thoughtful commentary on contemporary criticism, reveal a nuanced dialogue between the two works. Listeners will come away with a richer appreciation for how a celebrated classic can be rooted in both grand tradition and a surprising, intimate literary friendship.

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Details

Language

ca

Duration

~2 hours (131K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Nahum Maso i Carcases and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2020-11-24

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

J(

J. (Juan) Givanel Mas

1868–1946

A Barcelona-born scholar who devoted much of his life to Cervantes, he helped shape early 20th-century Cervantes studies through criticism, editing, and careful bibliographic work.

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