Utopía y melancolía en Don Quijote

The clash between these two dimensions of human condition – but also their complementary nature – make utopia and melancholy specially compelling as they address us today from Don Quixote’s text, providing an accurate standing from which both the author and his protagonist become our contemporaries....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Javier Muguerza
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Universidad Complutense de Madrid 2011-04-01
Series:Logos
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/ASEM/article/view/15843
Description
Summary:The clash between these two dimensions of human condition – but also their complementary nature – make utopia and melancholy specially compelling as they address us today from Don Quixote’s text, providing an accurate standing from which both the author and his protagonist become our contemporaries. Taking an ethic point of departure, we shall consider the aim of the fantasies of Don Quixote is to modify the reality in a certain moral sense, despite of his ridiculously and impractical goals. At the same time The Quixote’s utopia is interrelated with the melancholic Quixote’s character. The melancholy arises from the ethic conscience which is leaded by the moral duty of the justice. This article shows clearly the double melancholic and utopian nature of Don Quixote’s character, which is chaired by a modern ethic conscience.
ISSN:1575-6866
1988-3242