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A Companion to Lope de Vega

2021
An assessment of the life, work and reputation of Spain's leading Golden Age ...
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Lope de Vega

The Modern Language Journal, 1969
John A. Crow, Francis C. Hayes
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Lope de Vega

2017
Lope Félix de Vega Carpio (b. 1562–d. 1635) is one of Spain’s most celebrated and prolific writers. As a native and nearly lifelong resident of Madrid, he positioned himself at the very center of Imperial Spain’s cultural production. Spanish literati, in turn, acknowledged Lope de Vega’s prowess through a variety of epithets, which included Fénix de ...
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Lope's Role in the Lope de Vega Myth

Hispania, 1980
ON the eve of the four-hundredth anniversary of the birth of Lope de Vega, Zamora Vicente was still able to proclaim without reservation that "Lope es el creador de un teatro nacional, con todas las implicaciones que semejante denominaci6n encierra, con su grandeza y sus limitaciones."' In 1962, another distinguished scholar wrote a more restrained ...
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Lope de Vega and Michelangelo

Hispania, 1982
THE multiple references to painters and paintings encountered in Lope de Vega's writings have been catalogued by F. J. Sanchez Cant6n and Miguel Herrero Garcia.' Yet, other than passing references to "el sentido pict6rico que reflejan muchos de sus escritos,"2 most criticism of the Spanish playwright's works has not focused on this matter.
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Lope de Vega

Books Abroad, 1932
Patricio Gimeno, Marcel Carayon
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Lope de Vega and Titian

Comparative Literature, 1978
LOPE de Vega's debt to Italian Renaissance culture is well known. His knowledge of the Florentine Platonists, his utilization of Aristotelian commentators such as Robortello, and his wide command of the literature including the works of Ariosto, Boccaccio, G. Cintio, and Tasso are often cited in this connection.
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Cervantes and Lope de Vega

2021
Abstract Cervantes and Lope de Vega were the two most influential literary figures of early modern Spain. On the face of it, one might conclude that they complemented each other well and between them carved up the literary territories over which they were best suited to reign.
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