Luis de Góngora Essays

  • The metamorphoses's lesson

    986 Words  | 2 Pages

    During Antiquity, what could explain the mystery of Earth? No one could explain its creation, and reason of some animals and other elements formation. The author Ovid in the book Metamorphoses uses the God’s myth to explain how the world was created, and explain the meaning of life or the creation of certain animals or plants. Ovid also uses those myths to teach us lessons, which is the main meaning of his myths. All the myths have a very specific ending. Ovid wrote those myth to show us what we

  • The Love Story of Pyramus and Thisbe

    513 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Love Story of Pyramus and Thisbe “Pyramus was the most handsome of young men and Thisbe was the fairest beauty of the East.” ~Ovid in Metamorphoses Pyramus and Thisbe lived in Babylonia and from the time they were young, were neighbors. They played together daily as children and fell in love as they grew older. Although neighbors, their families were hostile to one another so the love between Pyramus and Thisbe remained a secret. They had a special meeting place at a wall between their houses

  • Hispanic Baroque Sor Juana

    938 Words  | 2 Pages

    year 1750 approximately. This time period, as opposed to the Renaissance, was an era where the feelings of distrust, disappointment, and pessimism was always present. A very important and recognized author of the Hispanic Baroque was Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz because of her defense of women’s intellectual rights against men (Puchner, 68). Sor Juana is mostly known for her Respuesta a Sor Filotea, which where she defends women to receive an education, and to be treated equally. During the Hispanic

  • Cuban-American Identity

    1624 Words  | 4 Pages

    define what the baroque has to offer as the ancestry of their writing. These theorists were writing at the time known as ‘El Boom latinoamericano’ – a resurgence of Latin American writing and writers. Suzanne Jill Levine writes, in the article “Jorge Luis Borges and Severo Sarduy: Two Writers of the Neo-Baroque” that “text as ‘tejido,’ as texture, of a text as an infinite weaving of texts appears” is an important aspect of the baroque aesthetic that Sarduy embraces during this time (30). This corresponds

  • Spanish Painters

    1016 Words  | 3 Pages

    Spanish painter, the country's greatest baroque artist, who, with Francisco de Goya and El Greco, forms the great triumvirate of Spanish painting. Velázquez was born in Seville on June 6, 1599, the oldest of six children; both his parents were from the minor nobility. Between 1611 and 1617 the young Velázquez worked as an apprentice to Francisco Pacheco, a Sevillian Mannerist painter who became Velázquez's father-in-law. During his student years Velázquez absorbed the most popular contemporaneous

  • Comparison of Federico García Lorca's Poems, Romance de la Pena Negra and La Aurora

    3674 Words  | 8 Pages

    Comparison of Federico García Lorca's Poems, Romance de la Pena Negra and La Aurora Romance de la Pena Negra (Ballad of the Black Sorrow) was written by Lorca on the 30. July 1924 (Catedra:80). It was one of a collection of poems he entitled the Romancero Gitano (Gypsy Ballads) that, when published, was a huge success, among academics and the general public alike, making this book one of his most well known pieces of work. There are many reasons why the poems received such wide acclaim in