New issue received from: ANALES CERVANTINOS (v. XLI. January-December 2009)
Summary of this issue:
STUDIES
*The stones and the psychological construction of Don Quixote. David Karl Ulrich
*Don Quixote in the French war. Ceferino Caro Lopez
*Where anyone who reads it will see it and whoever hears it read will hear it: about the metadramatic language of Master Pedro's puppets. Eduardo Olid Guerrero
*Two < > art pictures in American collections inspired by Don Quixote: Dance Scene (ca. 1650), by Joos van Craesbeeck (Neerliter, Flanders 1605/1606-Brussels ca. 1660) and Dorothea (1823) by John Quidor (Tappan, State of New York, 1801-Jersey City, New Jersey, 1881). Kenneth Brown
* The medical Quixote. Julian Bravo Vega
* The death adminicle and helping to die. On an obscure phrase of Sancho. Pedro Alvarez de Miranda
*The Much Esteemed History of the Ever-Famous Knight Don Quixote de la Mancha (1699): the best seller of an abridged English translation. Jose Manuel Lucia Megias and JAG Squirrel
* Don Quixote and the Oidor: disagreement between knights. Maria Eugenia Mayer
*Andalusia in the exemplary novels of Cervantes: a reflection on the novelistic space of Cervantes. Antonio Rey Hazas
*Lex deux Amantes (1705): a precious translation of The Two Maidens, an exemplary novel by Miguel de Cervantes. Ignacio Inarrea Las Heras
*Theatrical adaptations of Don Quixote in Inlaterra (from the XNUMXth to the XNUMXth century). JAG Squirrel
* Mirages and disappointments in Viceregal Naples: Cervantes and Cortese's Journeys to Parnassus. Donatella Gagliardi
*Cervantes, the new Muslims and the Information of Algiers. Natalio Ohanna
*The Spanish press before the IV Centenary of the publication of the first part of Don Quixote (2005). Maria Angeles Chaparro Dominguez
*Tradition and publishing dynamics: towards a renewed critical vision of the work of Miguel de Cervantes. The editorial work of the Academy of Hispanism
TEXTS
*Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, characters in a New Spain mojiganga mask: The humiliation of Don Félix Luna (XNUMXth century). Judith Farre
NOTES
*Prints of Don Quixote in exile. Graphic work of Augusto Fernández. Miguel Cabañas, Noemí de Haro, Idoia Murga and Mario Sánchez