Don Quixote
Home : Don Quixote Book II : Study Guide : Author of ClassicNote and Sources

Don Quixote Book II Study Guide

by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

Author of ClassicNote and Sources

John Burton, author of ClassicNote. Completed on January 19, 2003, copyright held by GradeSaver.

Cervantes, Miguel de., Tr. Charles Jarvis. Don Quixote. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999.

Cervantes, Miguel de., Ed. Robert Flores.. Don Quixote de la Mancha: An Old-Spelling Control Edition Based on the First Editions of Parts I and II. Vancouver: British Columbia University Press, 1988.

Fernández de Avellaneda, Alonso, Ed. Martín de Riguer. Segundo tomo del ingenioso hidalgo don Quixote de la Mancha Vol. I.. Madrid: Espasa-Calpe, 1972.

Nabokov, Vladimir, Ed. Fredson Bowers. Lectures on Don Quixote.. New York: arcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1983.

Ardila, John G. "Cervantes y la Quixotic Fiction: Sucesión episódica y otros recursos narrativos." Cervantes 21.1 (2001): 43-65.

Delgado, Edmundo Ernesto. "Consideraciones en torno al lenguaje en Don Quixote: Bases para una aproximación estilística." Cervantes 20.2 (2000): 79-100.

Flores, Robert. "A Portrait of Don Quixote from the Palette of Chaos Theory." Cervantes 22.1 (2002): 43-70.

Friedman, Edward. "Reading Inscribed: Don Quijote and the Parameters of Fiction." in On Cervantes: Essays for L. A. Murillo. Ed. James A. Parr. Newark: Juan de la Cuesta, 1991. 63-84.

Iffland, James. "Do We Really Need to Read Avellaneda?" Cervantes 21.1 (2001): 67-83.

Parr, James A. "Plato, Cervantes, Derrida: Framing, Speaking and Writing in Don Quijote." in On Cervantes: Essays for L. A. Murillo. Ed. James A. Parr. Newark: Juan de la Cuesta, 1991. 163-188.

Presberg, Charles. "'This is not a Prologue': Paradoxes of Historical and Poetic Discourse in the Prologue of Don Quijote, Book I." Modern Language Notes 110 (1995): 215-238.

Related Content for Don Quixote Book II