Miguel de Cervantes’s
Novelas ejemplares, a collection of short stories in the
tradition of Boccaccio. has a solid foundation in the history of
Golden Age Spain. Joseph V. Ricapito studies Cervantes’s work
from the point of view of “novelized history” or “history
novelized”; in line with current New Historical thought, he
argues that literary production is largely from life and experience,
and that Cervantes was acutely aware of the problems of his day.
The novelas offer us a glimpse of Cervantes’s Spain
and include a cataloguing of the social, political, and historical
problems of the time. Ricapito shows how Cervantes fictionalizes
the problems of unpopular minorities like Gypsies and conversos;
the difficulties of social mobility in a Christian setting; the
presence in society of differing and even outlandish individuals;
and the oppressive role of honor, which was popularized by Lope
de Vega and later formed a leitmotiv of Spanish drama.
In his analysis of Cervantes’s creative response to history,
Ricapito relates the novelas to the works of Lope de Vega
and Mateo Alemán and shows how Cervantes brings to life many
literary topoi and places them in a realistic, credible framework
in which the historical presence is strongly felt.
In Cervantes’s treatment of Spain’s waning prestige
in Europe, we see his vision of human behavior. His view is stern,
his critique is sharp, and he is sensitive to external stimuli.
"Contributing to renewed critical interest in Cervantes's novelas,
Professor Ricaptio's historicist study combines a Castrista approach
with early elements of new historicism by focusing on potential converso
(or morisco) subtexts underlying ostensibly conventional narratves....
this collection of essays should prove to be a valuable readin in novelas
studies." Nina Cox Davis, Revista de Estudios Hispánicos
For the complete review, see Revista de Estudios Hispánicos
31.3 (Oct. 1997): 578-80.
"These short synopses of the various chapters cannot, of course
reveal the full scope of the book although they do point to the auther's
intention: to present Cervantes as a thoughtful and humane person in
conflict with rigid codes of his society but unwilling or unable to
take a direct and open stand on such controversial problems. Prof. Ricaptio's
reading of the novelas is thoughtful and stimulationg, if occasionally
controversial, but the very engergy of his expostion engages the reader
to a continuous and rewarding mental discussion with the author. Frank
P. Casa, Hispanófila
For the complete review, see Hispanófila 42.126 (1999):
101-03.
"Ricapito's scholarship demonstrates the benefits derived from
examining literature and history within the same frame. Ricapito reveres
Cervantes's creative abilities and loathes reducing his work to a mere
mimetic realism.... Cervantistas will welcome this new approach
to the study of the Exemplary Novels." Eric J. Kartchner,
Bulletin of the Cervantes Society of America
For the complete review, see Bulletin of the Cervantes Society of
America 17.2 (Fall 1997): 137-41.
"This book is the work of a mature, serious scholar. As a whole
it is thought-provoking and highly readable and an important contribution
to the field." Manuel Durán, Yale University
"Professor Ricapito introduces his latest book with the recollection
of an after dinner discussion with Stephen Gilman at a restaurant in
Madrid, and the book retains the comfortable feeling of a charla
with an old friend on a well known and much loved topic.... It is when
Ricaptio synthesizes... that he is most successful. The strongest chapter
is unquestionably chapter 4, which deals with the prose of honor, linked
to Rojas' Celestina, and contrasts it with the drama of honor.
This provides a fine springboard for a discussion of converso indentity
and style, and lends itself especially well to an historical approach....
Ricapito's interpretation...adds greatly to our appreciation of the
richness of Cervantes' work, without beginning to exhaust it. It provides
a salutary reminder that Cervantes distinguishes himself more by his
humanity than by his humanist erudition. By focusing on the terrible
contradictions of the society in which Cervantes lived, Ricapito reminds
modern readers of facts of which they are all too often ignorant, and
will doubtless spur more detailed readings of the novelas ejemplares."
Sara A. Taddeo, Sixteenth-Century Journal
For the complete review, see Sixteenth-Century Journal 28.2
(1997): 634-35.
Other reviews:
Hispanic Review 66.3 (Summer 1998): 343-45 (by Peter N. Dunn).
Hispania 80 (Mar. 1997): 55-57 (by James A. Parr).
Choice Dec. 1996, 34-2064, p. 620 (by M. V. Ekstrom).
Zeitschfirt fúr Romanische Philologie 115.3 (1999):
551-53. (by Wolfgang Matzat).
Iberomania 53 (2001): 127-29. (by Thomas Bodenmüller).
Joseph V. Ricapito, Louisiana State University, has published
widely on the prose of the Spanish Golden Age, especially the
Spanish picaresque novel; on Alfonso de Valdés and the
work of Spanish writers influenced by Erasmus; and on the contacts
between Italy and Spain in the Renaissance.
ISBN: 978-1-55753-204-6
1996. Vol. 10. x, 164 pp. Paper $28.95
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