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Lazarillo de Tormes, todo problemas
Godoy-Gallardo, E. (Eduardo) +1 more
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Juan Maldonado and Lazarillo de Tormes
Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, 1995In the last thirty years students of the picaresque novel have put together a picture of the anonymous author of the Lazarillo that seems to us much more solid than it was before Marquez Villanueva addressed the question.1 It may not be too far off the mark to suggest, in fact, that that very anonymity has been a stimulus to analysis of the work itself,
Alfred Rodríguez
exaly +2 more sources
1903
Toward the end of the reign of Charles V there appeared a little book that, unpretentious and unassuming, was the severest satire upon existing conditions of society. It narrates the adventures of a boy who, in the various classes with whom he had associated, had always suffered from want of food, so that he could satisfy the cravings of his stomach ...
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Toward the end of the reign of Charles V there appeared a little book that, unpretentious and unassuming, was the severest satire upon existing conditions of society. It narrates the adventures of a boy who, in the various classes with whom he had associated, had always suffered from want of food, so that he could satisfy the cravings of his stomach ...
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1967
To the Editor:— I should like to differ with the interpretation of the Goya painting called El Garrotillo on the front cover of JAMA for Oct 31, 1966. The statement that Goya in this picture portrays a physician examining the throat of a child is certainly the usual one.
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To the Editor:— I should like to differ with the interpretation of the Goya painting called El Garrotillo on the front cover of JAMA for Oct 31, 1966. The statement that Goya in this picture portrays a physician examining the throat of a child is certainly the usual one.
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On Laughter in the "Lazarillo de Tormes"
Hispania, 1960haps a study of laughter as it appears in the Lazarillo will disclose a subjective attitude on the part of the author towards his work. Striking it is that in this book which reputedly evokes much merriment from the reader, the words for laughter, whether in adjectival, substantival or verbal form appear only eighteen times.
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