Cervantine Futures: Reading Cervantes after the Critical Turn
Editat de Nicholas R Jones, Paul Michael Johnson Contribuţii de Mercedes Alcalá-Galán, Luis F. Avilés, Margaret E. Boyle, Israel Burshatin, Susan Byrne, David Castillo, William Egginton, Ana Fernández-Blázquez, Pablo García Piñar, Alani Hicks-Bartlett, Catherine Infante, Elizabeth S. Lagresa-González, Ana Laguna, Chad Leahy, Maxim Rigaux, Luis Rodríguez Rincón, Victor Sierra Matute, Elizabeth Spragins, Cornesha Tweede, Steven Wagschalen Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 sep 2026
To date, the writings of Miguel de Cervantes have been oddly sidelined from larger, ongoing scholarly projects to link premodern literature with the most recent analytics of critical theory and cultural studies. Cervantine Futures addresses this conspicuous gap by highlighting creative, forward-looking, and rigorous approaches that situate Cervantes in recent theoretical developments in critical cultural studies. Conceived under the rubric of “futures”—collective and capacious, yet also subjunctive and transtemporal—this book tasks the fields of early modern Iberian and Cervantine studies with adopting a more global approach to the early modern period that surveys the current and historical landscapes while charting new horizons. Crucially, Cervantine Futures reflects upon how early modern texts, cultural modes of expression, and visual ideations from Cervantes’s life and legacy resonate with contemporary debates on gender, race, ability, and other issues. The volume thus includes scholarly provocations that deploy feminist, queer, critical race, disability studies, and new materialist approaches to Cervantes’s oeuvre—tendentiously positioned as “canonical”—with the purpose not only of scrutinizing its sociopolitical meanings, but also of creating new archives that productively reframe and rethink early modernity.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780826500458
ISBN-10: 0826500455
Pagini: 340
Ilustrații: 1 b&w image
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Vanderbilt University Press
Colecția Vanderbilt University Press
ISBN-10: 0826500455
Pagini: 340
Ilustrații: 1 b&w image
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Vanderbilt University Press
Colecția Vanderbilt University Press
Recenzii
“Each essay in this outstanding edited volume is a polished, incisive, and compelling piece on its own terms, and the collection overall is pathbreaking as it renews the case for the significance of Cervantes to early modern studies.”
—Leah Middlebrook, author of Imperial Lyric: New Poetry and New Subjects in Early Modern Spain
—Leah Middlebrook, author of Imperial Lyric: New Poetry and New Subjects in Early Modern Spain
Notă biografică
Nicholas R. Jones is a professor of Spanish and Portuguese at Yale University and a former King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center’s (KJCC) Scholar in Residence at New York University.
Paul Michael Johnson is an associate research professor of Spanish at Johns Hopkins University.
Paul Michael Johnson is an associate research professor of Spanish at Johns Hopkins University.
Cuprins
Introduction
Part I: Minor(itized) Characters
Chapter 1: Character Trouble: Theoretical Reflections on Don Quixote’s Marcela
Luis F. Avilés
Chapter 2: Imperial Discontents and Biopower in Cervantes’s “El celoso extremeño”
Israel Burshatin
Chapter 3: From the Margins to the Center: Black Women in the Novelas ejemplares
Cornesha Tweede and Elizabeth S. Lagresa-González
Chapter 4: Cervantine Intersectionality: Race, Gender, Sexuality, Age, and Ability in “El celoso extremeño”
Paul Michael Johnson
Part II: Othered Bodies
Chapter 5: “El manco sano,” Corporeal Variance, and the Problem of Transparency: For a Disability-Centered Approach to the Body and Health in Cervantes
Alani Hicks-Bartlett
Chapter 6: Shattering Glass: Cervantes between Diagnosis and Disability
Margaret E. Boyle
Chapter 7: Cervantine Staring: From Maritornes’s Divergent Body to Cervantes’s Self-Portrait
Pablo García Piñar
Chapter 8: Cervantes’s Cure: Reimagining Empathy, Medicine, and the Art of Healing
Ana Laguna
Part III: New Materialisms
Chapter 9: Naturecultures quijotescos: Toward a New Materialist Reading of Don Quijote de la Mancha
Luis Rodríguez Rincón
Chapter 10: Necropastoral and Conflicting Modes of Testimony in Don Quijote’s Tale of Grisóstomo and Marcela
Elizabeth Spragins
Chapter 11: Cervantes’s Animal Menagerie
Steven Wagschal
Chapter 12: Materializing Cervantes: Object Lessons from His Mediterranean World
Catherine Infante
Part IV: Buried Histories
Chapter 13: Cervantine Allusions
Susan Byrne
Chapter 14: Epic Bodies and Tombs: Material Readings of Don Quixote, XIX through Juan Latino’s Funeral Poetry
Maxim Rigaux
Chapter 15: Visual and Material Culture in Cervantes’s Works: The Painted Sargas in Don Quixote (II, 71)
Mercedes Alcalá-Galán
Chapter 16: The Quixotic Sensorium
Víctor Sierra Matute
Part V: Media Futures
Chapter 17: Cervantes and Inflationary Media
David Castillo and William Egginton
Chapter 18: (Non-)Cervantine Hoaxes: Discursive Populism and Don Quixote in the Internet Era
Ana Fernández-Blázquez
Chapter 19: Cervantes, Crusade Apologist: Responding to La conquista de Jerusalén por Godofre de Bullón Today
Chad Leahy
Part I: Minor(itized) Characters
Chapter 1: Character Trouble: Theoretical Reflections on Don Quixote’s Marcela
Luis F. Avilés
Chapter 2: Imperial Discontents and Biopower in Cervantes’s “El celoso extremeño”
Israel Burshatin
Chapter 3: From the Margins to the Center: Black Women in the Novelas ejemplares
Cornesha Tweede and Elizabeth S. Lagresa-González
Chapter 4: Cervantine Intersectionality: Race, Gender, Sexuality, Age, and Ability in “El celoso extremeño”
Paul Michael Johnson
Part II: Othered Bodies
Chapter 5: “El manco sano,” Corporeal Variance, and the Problem of Transparency: For a Disability-Centered Approach to the Body and Health in Cervantes
Alani Hicks-Bartlett
Chapter 6: Shattering Glass: Cervantes between Diagnosis and Disability
Margaret E. Boyle
Chapter 7: Cervantine Staring: From Maritornes’s Divergent Body to Cervantes’s Self-Portrait
Pablo García Piñar
Chapter 8: Cervantes’s Cure: Reimagining Empathy, Medicine, and the Art of Healing
Ana Laguna
Part III: New Materialisms
Chapter 9: Naturecultures quijotescos: Toward a New Materialist Reading of Don Quijote de la Mancha
Luis Rodríguez Rincón
Chapter 10: Necropastoral and Conflicting Modes of Testimony in Don Quijote’s Tale of Grisóstomo and Marcela
Elizabeth Spragins
Chapter 11: Cervantes’s Animal Menagerie
Steven Wagschal
Chapter 12: Materializing Cervantes: Object Lessons from His Mediterranean World
Catherine Infante
Part IV: Buried Histories
Chapter 13: Cervantine Allusions
Susan Byrne
Chapter 14: Epic Bodies and Tombs: Material Readings of Don Quixote, XIX through Juan Latino’s Funeral Poetry
Maxim Rigaux
Chapter 15: Visual and Material Culture in Cervantes’s Works: The Painted Sargas in Don Quixote (II, 71)
Mercedes Alcalá-Galán
Chapter 16: The Quixotic Sensorium
Víctor Sierra Matute
Part V: Media Futures
Chapter 17: Cervantes and Inflationary Media
David Castillo and William Egginton
Chapter 18: (Non-)Cervantine Hoaxes: Discursive Populism and Don Quixote in the Internet Era
Ana Fernández-Blázquez
Chapter 19: Cervantes, Crusade Apologist: Responding to La conquista de Jerusalén por Godofre de Bullón Today
Chad Leahy
Descriere
An examination of the writings of Miguel de Cervantes in conversation with some of the most pressing issues in cultural studies, critical theory, and sociopolitical discourse