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Modern Aesthetics, British Art, 16th-17th Century Spanish Literature (Golden Age) - Literary Criticism, English Fiction & Prose Literature - 18th Century - Literary Criticism, British History - Social Aspects, Empiricism, 18th Century British Philosophy,
Don Quixote in England by Ronald Paulson β€” book cover

Don Quixote in England

by Ronald Paulson
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Overview

Seldom has a single book, much less a translation, so deeply affected English literature as the translation of Cervantes' Don Quixote in 1612. The comic novel inspired drawings, plays, sermons, and other translations, making the name of the Knight of la Mancha as familiar as any folk character in English lore.

In this comprehensive study of the reception and conversion of Don Quixote in England, Ronald Paulson highlights the qualities of the novel that most attracted English imitators. The English Don Quixote was not the same knight who meandered through Spain, or found a place in other translations throughout Europe. The English Don Quixote found employment in all sorts of specifically English ways, not excluding the political uses to which a Spanish fool could be turned.

According to Paulson, a major impact of the novel and its hero was their stimulation of discussion about comedy itself, what he calls the "aesthetics of laughter." When Don Quixote reached England he did so at the time of the rise of empiricism, and adherents of both sides of the empiricist debate found arguments and evidence in the behavior and image of the noble knight. Four powerful disputes battered around his grey head: the proximity of madness and imagination; the definition of the beautiful; the cruelty of ridicule and its laughter; and the role of reason in the face of madness. Paulson's engaging account leads to a significant reassessment of current assumptions about eighteenth-century literature and art.

The Johns Hopkins University Press

About the Author, Ronald Paulson

Ronald Paulson is Mayer Professor of the Humanities at Johns Hopkins. His previous books include Representations of Revolution, Hogarth, in three volumes, and The Beautiful, Novel, and Strange: Aesthetics and Heterodoxy, the last available from Johns Hopkins.

The Johns Hopkins University Press

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Editorials

Times Literary Supplement

Paulson shows that Cervantes set the dominant model of comic writing in the period, and he explores the different ways in which writers lay claim to his work. In the early eighteenth century, the Knight of La Mancha often represents the madness of self-belief... An elegant chapter in the history of aesthetics or criticism.

Booknews

When the Knight of La Mancha "conquered" England, he encountered debates over empiricism rather than windmills. Paulson humanities, Johns Hopkins U. analyzes how Cervantes' noble fool impacted 18th-century English literature e.g. Addison, Fielding, Swift in its themes of the madness of imagination, madness in the face of reason including religious dogma, the kinship of an aesthetics of laughter to a politics of aesthetics, and the definition of beauty. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
December 1, 1997
Publisher
Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, c1998.
Pages
280
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780801856952

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