“A ninguno imitó; nació para maestro, y no discípulo”: Calderón’s early debt to Lope de Vega and others

Calderón had a relatively short period of apprenticeship as a playwright. The speed of his rise to prominence amongst his peers and his achieving success with audiences, popular and courtly, which were the result of the consummate skills he displayed as a dramatist, helped contribute to the rapid co...

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Main Author: Thacker, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Penn State University Press 2024
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author Thacker, J
author_facet Thacker, J
author_sort Thacker, J
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description Calderón had a relatively short period of apprenticeship as a playwright. The speed of his rise to prominence amongst his peers and his achieving success with audiences, popular and courtly, which were the result of the consummate skills he displayed as a dramatist, helped contribute to the rapid condensing of the myth of his having been born fully formed. In this article, the author analyses Calderón’s bold engagement with Lope de Vega and some of this writer’s contemporaries as he began his life as a playwright in the early 1620s. In particular, the article builds upon the work of Erik Coenen and Germán Vega García-Luengos, who have studied the early play, Cómo se comunican dos estrellas contrarias, and its possible place in the Calderonian canon. Set in Galicia, in the aftermath of the eleventh-century division of the Christian kingdoms by King Fernando, the drama is a lyrical take on Lope’s Las almenas de Toro. Calderón’s dramatization of the same epic material as Lope anticipates some of his later aesthetic concerns and allows us to glimpse his earliest technical engagement with playwriting. It demonstrates both dependence and single-mindedness and, perhaps curiously given his later reputation, a predilection for comical and lyrical modes.
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spelling oxford-uuid:b9ec46a3-6773-45e2-adbe-318c705232962024-05-24T09:56:28Z“A ninguno imitó; nació para maestro, y no discípulo”: Calderón’s early debt to Lope de Vega and othersJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:b9ec46a3-6773-45e2-adbe-318c70523296EnglishSymplectic ElementsPenn State University Press2024Thacker, JCalderón had a relatively short period of apprenticeship as a playwright. The speed of his rise to prominence amongst his peers and his achieving success with audiences, popular and courtly, which were the result of the consummate skills he displayed as a dramatist, helped contribute to the rapid condensing of the myth of his having been born fully formed. In this article, the author analyses Calderón’s bold engagement with Lope de Vega and some of this writer’s contemporaries as he began his life as a playwright in the early 1620s. In particular, the article builds upon the work of Erik Coenen and Germán Vega García-Luengos, who have studied the early play, Cómo se comunican dos estrellas contrarias, and its possible place in the Calderonian canon. Set in Galicia, in the aftermath of the eleventh-century division of the Christian kingdoms by King Fernando, the drama is a lyrical take on Lope’s Las almenas de Toro. Calderón’s dramatization of the same epic material as Lope anticipates some of his later aesthetic concerns and allows us to glimpse his earliest technical engagement with playwriting. It demonstrates both dependence and single-mindedness and, perhaps curiously given his later reputation, a predilection for comical and lyrical modes.
spellingShingle Thacker, J
“A ninguno imitó; nació para maestro, y no discípulo”: Calderón’s early debt to Lope de Vega and others
title “A ninguno imitó; nació para maestro, y no discípulo”: Calderón’s early debt to Lope de Vega and others
title_full “A ninguno imitó; nació para maestro, y no discípulo”: Calderón’s early debt to Lope de Vega and others
title_fullStr “A ninguno imitó; nació para maestro, y no discípulo”: Calderón’s early debt to Lope de Vega and others
title_full_unstemmed “A ninguno imitó; nació para maestro, y no discípulo”: Calderón’s early debt to Lope de Vega and others
title_short “A ninguno imitó; nació para maestro, y no discípulo”: Calderón’s early debt to Lope de Vega and others
title_sort a ninguno imito nacio para maestro y no discipulo calderon s early debt to lope de vega and others
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