Simbología del poder en <i>Lo que le toca al valor y príncipe de Orange</i>, de Antonio Mira de Amescua
Date issued
2012
In
La voz de Clío: imágenes del poder en la comedia histórica del Siglo de Oro, Universitatea din Craiova, 2012///188-203
Subjects
Antonio Mira de Amescua Power Symbols Tyrannicide Voice of the Enemy William of Orange
Abstract
In <i>Lo que le toca al valor y príncipe de Orange, Antonio Mira de Amescua dramatizes the murder of William of Orange</i>, in the first phase of the Eighty Years’ War. In order to justify the tyrannicide, Mira first convincingly presents the voice of the enemies of Catholicism and Spain, but manages to dominate that voice by piling up negative imagery on those enemies, who the play presents through compelling imagery as the incarnation of corrupt power, as a world upside down that the tyrannice will destroy. In addition, Mira associates this imagery of public policy to private debauchery, thereby linking the two actions of the play.
Later version
http://grisounav.wordpress.com/2012/11/02/publicado-el-volumen-la-voz-de-clio-imagenes-del-poder-en-la-comedia-historica-del-siglo-de-oro
Publication type
journal article
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S_nchez_Jim_nez_Antonio_-_Simbolog_a_del_poder_en_Lo_que_le_toca_al_valor_y_pr_ncipe_de_Orange_20121212.pdf
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