2024-03-29T12:57:30Zhttp://uvadoc.uva.es/oai/requestoai:uvadoc.uva.es:10324/215372021-06-30T07:50:22Zcom_10324_5460com_10324_5186com_10324_29291col_10324_12150
UVaDOC
author
Lama de la Cruz, VĂctor de
editor
Ediciones Universidad de Valladolid
2016-12-12T16:50:27Z
2016-12-12T16:50:27Z
2015
Castilla: Estudios de Literatura, 2015, N.6, pags.367-401
1989-7383
http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/21537
367
6
401
The books of pilgrimage that circulated in Western Europe in the Golden Age, have suffered a double oblivion: on the one hand, as travel books they have not been considered in literature manuals; on the other hand, their religious themes and repetitive structure have been arguments for the critics to barely pay attention to them. It is not surprising, therefore, that an author like Pedro Escobar Cabeza de Vaca and his Luzero de la Tierra Sancta have been ignored, and their study seems today more an exercise of "literary archeology" than of literary history . In the following pages we try to demonstrate that the study of a work like this is interesting from several points of view and provides new clues to understanding the Spanish culture and literature of the late 16th century.
spa
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Literatura
El vallisoletano Pedro Escobar Cabeza de Vaca en su Luzero de la Tierra Sancta
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
URL
https://uvadoc.uva.es/bitstream/10324/21537/1/Castilla-2015-6-VallisoletanoPedroEscobar.pdf
File
MD5
7602e3b6fcb58cea93f4b9bb09c33ddf
335935
application/pdf
Castilla-2015-6-VallisoletanoPedroEscobar.pdf