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The Student of Salamanca / El Estudiante de Salamanca
Contributor(s): de Espronceda y. Delgado, Jose (Author), Fedorchek, Robert M. (Translator), Iarocci, Michael (Introduction by)
ISBN: 1588713075     ISBN-13: 9781588713070
Publisher: Juan de La Cuesta-Hispanic Monographs
OUR PRICE:   $26.96  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: October 2017
* Not available - Not in print at this time *
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Drama | European - Spanish & Portuguese
Series: Serie de Traducciones Criticas
Physical Information: 0.35" H x 6" W x 9" (0.50 lbs) 162 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

A translation from the Spanish into English of the play by Jos de Espronceda y Delgado. The translation is by Robert M. Fedorchek and the introduction is by Michael Iarocci. This is number 9 in Juan de la Cuesta Hispanic Monograph's Serie de traducciones cr ticas.

***

What to say of the rebel who fears neither God nor the devil, and who would challenge the Almighty to a duel? Such a man is don F lix de Montemar, the Student of Salamanca, a "second don Juan Tenorio" and profligate descendant of the first don Juan Tenorio dramatized so memorably by Tirso de Molina in The Trickster of Seville (El burlador de Sevilla, 1630).

We might say that he is the literary incarnation of Jos de Espronceda y Delgado (1808-42), the greatest of the Spanish Romantic poets, the champion of liberty who gave voice to dissidents and loners on the fringes of society. In rousing verses and stirring refrains Espronceda sings of the individual in "The Pirate's Song" (La canci n del pirata), "The Beggar" (El mendigo), "The Song of the Cossack" (El canto del cosaco), and "The Executioner" (El verdugo). And in his long unfinished epic poem of six cantos--the seventh is but a fragment--"The Devil World" (El diablo mundo), he offers illusion and disillusion, a wide-ranging vision that encompasses the many extremes of the human experience.

On the world's stage, however, the lion's share of the poet's everlasting fame may just possibly rest on "The Student of Salamanca" (El estudiante de Salamanca). The protagonist don F lix de Montemar--a student in title only--seduces and then abandons genteel, tender-hearted do a Elvira, who in her final moments writes to him of her trampled, unreciprocated love. After killing her brother, don Diego, who had sought to avenge his sister, don F lix will come upon a ghostly white ethereal apparition that he follows through shadowy streets only to witness don Diego's and his funeral procession. And it is after he scoffs at his own obsequies that he begins a phantasmagorical descent from which there is no escape.

"The Student of Salamanca" is the second of the three universally recognized don Juan figures in Spanish literature, and all of them are concerned--to varying degrees--with God and salvation or damnation. Tirso's refuses to repent and faces divine wrath; Jos Zorrilla's don Juan (Don Juan Tenorio, 1844), who also witnesses his own funeral procession, will repent, know God's mercy, and be saved through do a In s's love for him; what don F lix will know is the embrace of a livid skeleton, and instead of the music that Zorrilla's don Juan hears as his life ebbs, don F lix will hear an altogether different sound.


Contributor Bio(s): de Espronceda y. Delgado, Jose: - Robert M. Fedorchek is a professor emeritus and past chair of the department of modern languages and literatures at Fairfield University. He has published twenty-two books of translations of Spanish literature; this is his fifth translation for Juan de la Cuesta Hispanic Monographs.Fedorchek, Robert M.: - Michael Iarocci is Professor of Spanish and chair of the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of California, Berkeley. He has published widely on the literature and culture of modern Spain, and he is the author of two books: Enrique Gil y la genealogia de la lirica moderna (Juan de la Cuesta, 1999) and Properties of Modernity: Romantic Spain, Modern Europe, and the Legacies of Empire (Vanderbilt University Press, 2006).