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The Picaresque Novel in Western Literature: From the Sixteenth Century to the Neopicaresque

The Picaresque Novel in Western Literature: From the Sixteenth Century to the Neopicaresque

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Cambridge University Press, 5/19/2015
EAN 9781107031654, ISBN10: 1107031656

Hardcover, 285 pages, 23.5 x 16 x 2 cm
Language: English

Since the sixteenth century, Western literature has produced picaresque novels penned by authors across Europe, from Alemán, Cervantes, Lesage and Defoe to Cela and Mann. Contemporary authors of neopicaresque are renewing this traditional form to express twenty-first-century concerns. Notwithstanding its major contribution to literary history, as one of the founding forms of the modern novel, the picaresque remains a controversial literary category, and its definition is still much contested. The Picaresque Novel in Western Literature examines the development of the picaresque, chronologically and geographically, from its origins in sixteenth-century Spain to the neopicaresque in Europe and the United States.

1. Origins and definition of the picaresque genre J. A. Garrido Ardila
2. Lazarillo de Tormes and the dream of a world without poverty Alexander Samson
3. Guzmán de Alfarache and after
the Spanish picaresque novel in the seventeenth century Howard Mancing
4. The Spanish female picaresque Enrique García Santo-Tomás
5. The Baroque picaro
Francisco de Quevedo's Buscón Edward H. Friedman
6. Cervantes and the picaresque
a question of compatibility Chad M. Gasta
7. The picaresque novel and the rise of the English novel
from Baldwin and Delony to Defoe and Smollett J. A. Garrido Ardila
8. Defoe and the picaresque Brean Hammond
9. Picaresque itineraries in the eighteenth-century French novel Jenny Mander
10. The picaro as narrator, writer and reader
the novels of Hans Jakob von Grimmelshausen Helen Watanabe-O'Kelly
11. Russia
the picaresque repackaged Marcia A. Morris
12. Riches to rags
from epic to picaresque at the colonial origins of the Latin American novel Erik Camayd-Freixas
13. The neopicaresque. The picaresque myth in the twentieth-century novel Shelley Godsland.