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From parody to satire: clerical and estates satire

Dorothy Sherman Severin-1989-06-01-Cambridge University Press eBooks
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Whether or not there is ecclesiastical satire in Celestina has been the subject of some debate in recent criticism. In any event, from the angle of Rojas' contemporary audience various passages seem to fall into this category, whatever the authors' ulterior motives might have been. The primitive author begins this type of satire in a promising vein with Celestina's invention of ‘moza’ [wench] and ‘fraile gordo’ [fat friar] to divert Sempronio's suspicions of Elicia's behaviour. Sempronio rises to the bait with his scandal-mongering response:

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Whether or not there is ecclesiastical satire in Celestina has been the subject of some debate in recent criticism. In any event, from the angle of Rojas' contemporary audience various passages seem to fall into this category, whatever the authors' ulterior motives might have been. The primitive author begins this type of satire in a promising vein with Celestina's invention of ‘moza’ [wench] and ‘fraile gordo’ [fat friar] to divert Sempronio's suspicions of Elicia's behaviour. Sempronio rises to the bait with his scandal-mongering response:

Keywords

CriticismSubject (documents)ArtLiteratureEvent (particle physics)PhilosophyComputer sciencePhysics

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