Kings, Saints and Husbands: Portuguese Characters in the Golden Age Theatre
The Portuguese reality is part of the thematic heritage of the Spanish Golden Age theatre which highlights from the Lusitanian their courage at war and their excess in passion. Literary interactions took place in two senses: the Lusitanian tradition was treated in Spanish pieces, and Portuguese play...
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Instituto de Estudios Auriseculares (IDEA)
2015-11-01
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doaj-dff9b9ffa1a24d1bb7ddfb89cf7806722020-11-24T22:39:59ZengInstituto de Estudios Auriseculares (IDEA)Hipogrifo: Revista de Literatura y Cultura del Siglo de Oro2328-13082015-11-0132153110.13035/H.2015.03.02.0395Kings, Saints and Husbands: Portuguese Characters in the Golden Age TheatreMaría Rosa Álvarez Sellers0Universitat de ValènciaThe Portuguese reality is part of the thematic heritage of the Spanish Golden Age theatre which highlights from the Lusitanian their courage at war and their excess in passion. Literary interactions took place in two senses: the Lusitanian tradition was treated in Spanish pieces, and Portuguese playwrights wrote in Castilian following Lope de Vega in his <em>Arte nuevo de hacer comedias</em> en este tiempo (1609). Although history and hagiography will be the most exploited aspects due to the impact of their protagonists, on other occasions Portugal will be used as a setting to universal conflicts. Kings such as D. Afonso Henriques, D. João II and D. Sebastião star in works of Tirso de Molina, Lope de Vega or Cubillo de Aragón; and <em>El príncipe constante</em> by Calderón and <em>Caer para levantar</em> by Moreto, Matos Fragoso and Cáncer relate, respectively, the lives of two Portuguese saints, S. Fernando and S. Gil. We will analyse <em>El príncipe constante</em> and <em>A secreto agravio, secreta venganza</em> by Calderón and <em>Las quinas de Portugal</em> by Tirso de Molina, with the aim of discovering the degree of involvement between the dramaturgical approaches and historical context that includes or propitiates them, in order to try to reveal the elements that motivated the rise and the decline of Portuguese topics in the seventeenth century Spanish theatre.http://revistahipogrifo.com/index.php/hipogrifo/article/view/113 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
María Rosa Álvarez Sellers |
spellingShingle |
María Rosa Álvarez Sellers Kings, Saints and Husbands: Portuguese Characters in the Golden Age Theatre Hipogrifo: Revista de Literatura y Cultura del Siglo de Oro |
author_facet |
María Rosa Álvarez Sellers |
author_sort |
María Rosa Álvarez Sellers |
title |
Kings, Saints and Husbands: Portuguese Characters in the Golden Age Theatre |
title_short |
Kings, Saints and Husbands: Portuguese Characters in the Golden Age Theatre |
title_full |
Kings, Saints and Husbands: Portuguese Characters in the Golden Age Theatre |
title_fullStr |
Kings, Saints and Husbands: Portuguese Characters in the Golden Age Theatre |
title_full_unstemmed |
Kings, Saints and Husbands: Portuguese Characters in the Golden Age Theatre |
title_sort |
kings, saints and husbands: portuguese characters in the golden age theatre |
publisher |
Instituto de Estudios Auriseculares (IDEA) |
series |
Hipogrifo: Revista de Literatura y Cultura del Siglo de Oro |
issn |
2328-1308 |
publishDate |
2015-11-01 |
description |
The Portuguese reality is part of the thematic heritage of the Spanish Golden Age theatre which highlights from the Lusitanian their courage at war and their excess in passion. Literary interactions took place in two senses: the Lusitanian tradition was treated in Spanish pieces, and Portuguese playwrights wrote in Castilian following Lope de Vega in his <em>Arte nuevo de hacer comedias</em> en este tiempo (1609). Although history and hagiography will be the most exploited aspects due to the impact of their protagonists, on other occasions Portugal will be used as a setting to universal conflicts. Kings such as D. Afonso Henriques, D. João II and D. Sebastião star in works of Tirso de Molina, Lope de Vega or Cubillo de Aragón; and <em>El príncipe constante</em> by Calderón and <em>Caer para levantar</em> by Moreto, Matos Fragoso and Cáncer relate, respectively, the lives of two Portuguese saints, S. Fernando and S. Gil. We will analyse <em>El príncipe constante</em> and <em>A secreto agravio, secreta venganza</em> by Calderón and <em>Las quinas de Portugal</em> by Tirso de Molina, with the aim of discovering the degree of involvement between the dramaturgical approaches and historical context that includes or propitiates them, in order to try to reveal the elements that motivated the rise and the decline of Portuguese topics in the seventeenth century Spanish theatre. |
url |
http://revistahipogrifo.com/index.php/hipogrifo/article/view/113 |
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