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Lazarillo de Tormes (1554)
Anonymous Spanish work considered foundational to the picaresque novel; a first-person life story that critiques society through everyday scenes, hunger, and irony rather than direct preaching.
Picaresque novel (novela picaresca)
Narrative tradition featuring a low-born protagonist who survives by wit while serving multiple masters in an episodic structure that exposes social corruption and hypocrisy.
Pícaro
The picaresque protagonist: a poor, marginalized survivor whose “morality” is shaped by necessity (especially hunger) and social constraints.
Autobiographical first-person narration
A narrative told as the protagonist’s own life story (as an adult recalling childhood), creating two layers: the child who suffers and the adult who interprets/justifies.
Episodic structure (tratados/masters)
Plot organized into long episodes tied to different masters; each master functions like a “social case study” embodying a vice or institutional failure.
Social determinism
The idea that the pícaro rarely has real freedom; he reacts to poverty and hunger, suggesting society itself “produces” trickery and moral compromise.
Hunger as a narrative motor
In Lazarillo, hunger is the main driving force of events and choices, shaping the book’s ethics: cunning becomes a practical virtue for survival.
Desengaño
Education through disillusionment; learning that authority (adult, social, religious) can be unjust, so innocence is replaced by harsh realism.
Unreliable narrator
A narrator whose account is shaped by self-interest; he selects details to control interpretation, portrays himself as a victim when useful, and normalizes questionable actions.
“Caso” (framing controversy)
The motivating “case” or controversial matter Lazarillo explains in a letter; it frames the entire narrative as a self-defense rather than an innocent memoir.
Honor (16th-century Spanish concept)
A social system tied to public reputation, “purity,” and appearances; Lazarillo shows how society values seeming honorable over living justly.
Religious hypocrisy
Critique of religious figures/institutions that should embody charity but instead appear greedy or cruel, highlighting the gap between ideal and practice.
Irony (as social critique)
A strategy where the narrator’s words and the reader’s conclusions diverge; critique emerges indirectly through contradictions, everyday details, and tone.
Don Quijote de la Mancha (1605, Part I)
Cervantes’s landmark work in the rise of the modern novel; follows a man who, influenced by chivalric books, interprets ordinary reality as knightly adventure.
Parody
Imitation of a genre to expose its excesses; Don Quijote transfers chivalric codes to a realistic world where they no longer fit, creating comedy and critique.
Perspectivism (reality vs. interpretation)
The clash between what happens and how different characters interpret it; Cervantes often resists a single “correct” view, emphasizing competing perspectives and consequences.
Metafiction
Narrative self-awareness: the text draws attention to how stories are written, edited, and told, reinforcing the theme that “reality” is shaped by narration.
Idealism vs. reality (central conflict)
In Don Quijote, an ethical/poetic ideal is imposed on a practical world; this can reveal social ugliness but can also cause harm when ideals become dogma.
Renaissance humanism
Literary-cultural shift emphasizing classical heritage and the human experience—reason, harmony, nature, and balanced form—shaping major poetic themes and styles.
Carpe diem
“Seize the day”: a poetic exhortation to enjoy beauty and youth now, motivated by awareness that time will destroy them (not simply reckless hedonism).
Tempus fugit
“Time flies”: the theme that time passes quickly, often providing the urgency behind carpe diem arguments.
Locus amoenus
An idealized natural setting (shade, river, meadow) symbolizing harmony; used as a space for love, desire, or serene withdrawal.
Sonnet (soneto)
A 14-line poem (often two quatrains + two tercets) in which analysis commonly focuses on the “turn” (volta/giro) from description to reflection or exhortation.
Hyperbaton
Deliberate alteration of normal word order to create an elevated tone, emphasize key words, and increase musicality—common in Renaissance poetry.
Apostrophe
A direct address to a person or “you” within the poem, creating urgency and persuasive force (especially in carpe diem poems).