El Buscón (The Swindler)

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c "Summaries of Spanish Literature Books". Archived from the original on 2008-03-07. Retrieved 2008-01-08.
  2. ^ a b c "El Buscon - Quevedo". Archived from the original on 2008-01-12. Retrieved 2008-01-08.
  3. ^ Henry Ettinghausen, “Quevedo's Converso Picaro,” MLN, Vol. 102, No. 2, Hispanic Issue (Mar., 1987), 241.
  4. ^ C. Brian Morris, "The Unity and Structure of Quevedo’s ‘Buscón’: ‘Desgracias encadenadas’", Occasional Papers in Modern Language, no. 1 (Hull: University of Hull, 1965).
  5. ^ James Iffland, Quevedo and the Grotesque (Boydell & Brewer, 1982), 76.
  6. ^ a b Terence E. May, Wit of the Golden Age: Articles on Spanish Literature (Edition Reichenberger, 1986), 125.
  7. ^ Destreza Translation & Research Project: Famous Duels Archived 2007-10-08 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Luis Pacheco de Narváez y Quevedo, historia de un odio Archived 2007-12-31 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Quevedo, Francisco de (1670). "Buscon's departure from Alcala towards Segovia; His meeting with two Coxcombs, with whom he passed the time on the way; one was an Engineer, t'other a Fencer". The Life and Adventures of Buscon the Witty Spaniard. Put into English by a Person of Honour. To which is added, The Provident Knight. With a dedicatory letter signed: J. D. Henry Herringman. pp. 81–87.
  10. ^ wikisource:es:Historia de la vida del Buscón: Libro Primero: Capítulo III: continues with [...] porque se le había comido de unas búas de resfriado, que aun no fueron de vicio porque cuestan dinero;: "[...] because it had been eaten by the bubons of a cold, which were not of vice because they cost money;".
  11. ^ a b Christopher J. Pountain, A History of the Spanish Language Through Texts (Routledge, 2000), 159.
  12. ^ C. Brian Morris, "The Unity and Structure of Quevedo’s ‘Buscón’: ‘Desgracias encadenadas’", Occasional Papers in Modern Language, no. 1 (Hull: University of Hull, 1965), 6.
  13. ^ Morris, "The Unity and Structure of Quevedo’s ‘Buscón’, 6.
  14. ^ Francisco de Quevedo, Vida del Buscón, llamado Don Pablos (Barcelona: Editorial Juventud, 1968), 43-4.
  15. ^ in the picaresque novel Historía de la vida del Buscón (c. 1604), the great master of satire, Francisco Quevedo, offers a critical portrait of an arbitrista who is derided as effectively insane precisely because of his concern with the question of crusade: I was going along keeping myself busy thinking about these things when, having passed Torote, I came upon a man on a saddled mule who was talking to himself with such speed, and so absorbed, that even being next to him, he didn’t see me. I greeted him and he greeted me; I asked him where he was a going, and after we had exchanged responses, we started to talk about whether the Turk was coming down, and about the King’s forces. He started to talk about how the Holy Land could be won, and how Algiers would be won; in which discourses I figured out that he was a Republic and governance crazy-person. Compare: Edited by Ken Tully, Chad Leahy,Jerusalem Afflicted Quaresmius, Spain, and the Idea of a 17th-century Crusade, [1]
  16. ^ Henry Ettinghausen, "Quevedo's Converso Picaro," MLN, Vol. 102, No. 2, Hispanic Issue (Mar., 1987), 241.
  17. ^ Daniel Vierge Biography
  18. ^ Some sources, such as http://www.hoycinema.com/buscon-1974.htm Archived 2007-12-17 at the Wayback Machine, give the film's release date as 1974, others as 1975 and 1976. IMdB says 1979.
  19. ^ Buscón, El (1979)
  20. ^ "Kalipedia". Archived from the original on 2012-02-09. Retrieved 2008-01-08.

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