Present Based On Books La vida de Lazarillo de Tormes
Title | : | La vida de Lazarillo de Tormes |
Author | : | Anonymous |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Clásicos Universales |
Pages | : | Pages: 96 pages |
Published | : | June 30th 2004 by Mestas Ediciones (first published 1554) |
Categories | : | Classics. European Literature. Spanish Literature. Fiction. Academic. School |
Anonymous
Hardcover | Pages: 96 pages Rating: 3.52 | 17724 Users | 750 Reviews
Narrative To Books La vida de Lazarillo de Tormes
Lázaro es un muchacho desarrapado a quien la miseria obliga a emplearse como sirviente. Las inocentes y a veces justificadas burlas con las que Lázaro se defiende de sus amos son castigadas con una crueldad brutal. Así, garrotazo a garrotazo, la simpleza y credulidad del Lázaro de las primeras páginas ceden paso a la sagacidad y a la astucia propias del más clásico y típico de los pícaros.
Define Books Supposing La vida de Lazarillo de Tormes
Original Title: | La vida del Lazarillo de Tormes, y de sus fortunas y adversidades |
ISBN: | 8489163413 (ISBN13: 9788489163416) |
Edition Language: | Spanish |
Setting: | Spain |
Rating Based On Books La vida de Lazarillo de Tormes
Ratings: 3.52 From 17724 Users | 750 ReviewsCritique Based On Books La vida de Lazarillo de Tormes
☆ read for school☆Truly remarkable that this work was first published in 1554. Remarkable also that it became an immediate international success. What that should tell us is that human foibles have not changed since, well, we started recording human foibles. A small boy, a prostitute's bastard son, makes the best of a brutal existence, mooring to one master after another, doing what it takes to survive. He faces greed and naïveté, pretentiousness and self-loathing, cruelty, and always hunger. He learns well
As I gather this is one of the first truly satirical novels in the history of fiction, about a poor peasant's quest to find a decent master. A series of vignettes poking fun at his social superiors and, in a deeper way, calling into question the morality of the entire system of Imperial Spain. Is it funny? Not really, most things aren't funny half a millennium after they've been written. More interesting as a historical curiosity than on its own merits (to most current readers, or so I suspect)

This is a quick little read primarily concerned with class distinctions in Spain in the 1500s. It is critical of clergy and the sale of indulgences (primarily in regard to hypocrisy) as well as the aristocracy's focus on image regardless of actual circumstances. I read an English-language version on kindle that I was unable to find the correct edition for, not the Spanish language edition here. It was interesting enough, but not really my style of literature. Of course it only took a little over
This one came recommended by Ol Soiled Slacksa neighbor, of sorts, just a short drive from here, a pleasant afternoonswait, no one voluntarily goes to Indiana, anywhere in Indiana. There are scads of Republicans there, fundamentalists aplenty, and a surprising number of nudist camps. The place is scary, and the contents of the water there is suspect at best. In any case.So here I was, casually making my way through some pretty incredible Latin American authors, occasionally dipping into the
One can imagine the anonymous author of Lazarillo de Tormes sitting down to write in a mood similar to that of Erasmus when he penned In Praise of Folly, or of Voltaire when he composed Candide: full of the wry amusement of one engaged in a learned, witty, and irreverent literary exercise. And yet this book, like those other two, quickly became something far more than an elegant diversion. For with Lazarillo the author spawned an entire literary genre, the picaresque, creating a character and a
A funny and relatively easy read amongst all the classics I've been reading, so it's fair to say I enjoyed Lazarillo for its playfulness with the character protagonist and its straightforward messages.
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