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Book
The illusions of Doctor Faustino
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0813218330 9780813218335 9780813215389 0813215382 Year: 2008 Publisher: Washington, D.C. Catholic University of America Press

Juanita la Larga
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0813216648 9780813216645 0813214351 9780813214351 0813214343 9780813214344 Year: 2006 Publisher: Washington, D.C. Catholic University of America Press

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Abstract

Juanita la Larga (1896), the third of Juan Valera's eponymous novels with a female protagonist, unfolds in a small town in nineteenth-century Spain and tells the story of a young girl's romance with a wealthy widower many years her senior.

Don Álvaro, or, The force of fate (1835)
Authors: ---
ISBN: 081321646X 9780813216461 0813213975 9780813213972 Year: 2005 Publisher: Washington, D.C. Catholic University of America Press

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Abstract

Don Alvaro, or the Force of Fate by Angel de Saavedra, Duke of Rivas (1791-1865), premiered in 1835 in Madrid and changed the Spanish stage forever after. It was the benchmark Romantic play of early nineteenth-century Spain. In this English edition designed for either classroom use or performance, Robert Fedorchek presents a readable translation faithful to the tone and spirit of the original. Joyce Tolliver enhances the book with a rich introduction highlighting the work's lasting significance. The play tells of the torrid love of the mysterious Don Alvaro and the lovely Dona Leonor, and how fate intervenes - by way of Alvaro's role in the ""accidental"" death of Leonor's father - to bring about the extermination of Leonor's family at the hands of the man who loves her to distraction. Although chronologically not the first Spanish Romantic drama, Don Alvaro is generally considered the true exponent of the freedom of expression that Romanticism brought to the theater. It does away with all the Neoclassical rules: it exceeds twenty-four hours; the action takes place in two countries; it mixes high and low; prose alternates with verse; and the characters express, melodramatically and passionately, their innermost feelings. It is also generally considered the first play in the best trilogy, along with Antonio Garcia Gutierrez's El trovador (The troubadour, 1836) and Juan Eugenio Hartzenbusch's Los amantes de Teruel (The lovers of Teruel, 1837).

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