Chapter
Publicly Available
Illustrations
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction: The Age of Iberian Epic 1
-
PART ONE: Of Gods and Textual Models
- 1 Design Ingeniously Corrected: Corte-Real, Os Lusíadas, and the Gods in the Felicissima 25
- 2 Pagan Nature and the Naturalization of Empire in the New World Epyllions of Bento Teixeira and Silvestre de Balboa1 59
- 3 Lyric as Temptation in Alonso de Ercilla and Torquato Tasso 96
-
PART TWO: The Poet as Hero
- 4 The Many Voices of the Poet: Narrative Polyphony in Os Lusíadas 131
- 5 Eyewitness, Hero, and Poet: Alonso de Ercilla in the Three Parts of La Araucana 165
-
PART THREE: Gendered Epics
- 6 The Voice and the Veil: Pearls, Villancicos, and Dissent in Juan de Castellanos’s “Elegy 14” 207
- 7 Domestic Bliss and Strife: Fresia and Caupolicán in Alonso de Ercilla’s La Araucana and Pedro de Oña’s Arauco domado 243
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PART FOUR: New Historiographic and Cartographic Boundaries
- 8 “Así el cielo lo quiso”: Christopher Columbus and the Anonymous Pilot in Carlo famoso by Luis Zapata de Chaves 279
- 9 Cartography in Bernardo de Balbuena’s El Bernardo o victoria de Roncesvalles 312
- Afterword 355
- Contributors 371
- Index 375
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction: The Age of Iberian Epic 1
-
PART ONE: Of Gods and Textual Models
- 1 Design Ingeniously Corrected: Corte-Real, Os Lusíadas, and the Gods in the Felicissima 25
- 2 Pagan Nature and the Naturalization of Empire in the New World Epyllions of Bento Teixeira and Silvestre de Balboa1 59
- 3 Lyric as Temptation in Alonso de Ercilla and Torquato Tasso 96
-
PART TWO: The Poet as Hero
- 4 The Many Voices of the Poet: Narrative Polyphony in Os Lusíadas 131
- 5 Eyewitness, Hero, and Poet: Alonso de Ercilla in the Three Parts of La Araucana 165
-
PART THREE: Gendered Epics
- 6 The Voice and the Veil: Pearls, Villancicos, and Dissent in Juan de Castellanos’s “Elegy 14” 207
- 7 Domestic Bliss and Strife: Fresia and Caupolicán in Alonso de Ercilla’s La Araucana and Pedro de Oña’s Arauco domado 243
-
PART FOUR: New Historiographic and Cartographic Boundaries
- 8 “Así el cielo lo quiso”: Christopher Columbus and the Anonymous Pilot in Carlo famoso by Luis Zapata de Chaves 279
- 9 Cartography in Bernardo de Balbuena’s El Bernardo o victoria de Roncesvalles 312
- Afterword 355
- Contributors 371
- Index 375