A errância como potência em Dom Quixote
From Don Quixote's refusal to seek courts or cities, made explicit in a dialogue with Sancho Panza in the twentieth-first chapter of the first part of Cervantes's book, this article reflects on his wandering, as a perambulation in the fields, but also as a non-function-oriented behavior an...
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Príomhúdar: | |
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Formáid: | Online |
Teanga: | por eng |
Foilsithe: |
Universidade de São Paulo. Faculdade de Arquitetura e Urbanismo.
2019
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Rochtain Ar Líne: | https://www.revistas.usp.br/posfau/article/view/147568 |
Clibeanna: |
Cuir Clib Leis
Gan Chlibeanna, Bí ar an gcéad duine leis an taifead seo a chlibeáil!
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Achoimre: | From Don Quixote's refusal to seek courts or cities, made explicit in a dialogue with Sancho Panza in the twentieth-first chapter of the first part of Cervantes's book, this article reflects on his wandering, as a perambulation in the fields, but also as a non-function-oriented behavior and as an identity in constant invention. This reflection, with the various philosophical and literary references that it raises, finds not a peculiarity of the knight from la Mancha, but a permanent tension in our culture, proposing Don Quixote as a reversion of the way we are used to read it. |
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