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Ovidian Lyric Voice in the Iberian Baroque

  • Autores: Guinevere W. Allen
  • Localización: Hispanic review, ISSN-e 1553-0639, Vol. 82, Nº 4, 2014, págs. 445-463
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • The present study is an analysis of the ways in which Ovid�s account of the myth of Echo and Narcissus (Metamorphoses vv. 357�401) serves as a foundation for models of sonority and voice within Iberian Baroque aesthetics. In more specific terms, I argue that these models enabled seventeenth-century Iberian (and Ibero-American) poets�especially Luis de Góngora and those poets in dialogue with his work�to make strategic use of gendered discourse at both the semantico-referential and pragmatic levels of signification. Grounding my analysis in a close reading of selected works by Luis de Góngora, Sóror Violante do Céu, and Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, I point to the implementation of specific poetic elements (such as hyperbaton, enjambment, and rima abrazada) which constitute a mode of poetic composition that works in large measure to foreground prosody over semantic and syntactic order. The result is a �poetics of Echo� that draws from a specific conception of Echo�s linguistic presence in the Ovidian version of the myth. I argue that a particularly Ovidian intersection of body, textuality, and voice emerges during the early seventeenth-century Ibero-Baroque poetry that I consider.


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