Lexington Books
Pages: 294
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅛
978-1-4985-3695-0 • Hardback • December 2018 • $136.00 • (£105.00)
978-1-4985-3697-4 • Paperback • October 2020 • $47.99 • (£37.00)
978-1-4985-3696-7 • eBook • December 2018 • $45.50 • (£35.00)
María Odette Canivell Arzú is former associate professor of English and interdisciplinary studies at James Madison University.
Introduction: 35 Million Kings
Chapter 1: Is the Hero Still Worshipable?
Chapter 2: To Be Or Not To Be Arthur: Is That The Question?
Chapter 3: In A Place of La Mancha Whose Name I Cannot Recall. . .
Chapter 4: The Path to Herodom
Chapter 5: How to Win Friends and Influence Others
Heroes today are in short supply, so this book by Ma. Odette Canivell should be celebrated as she takes us back to two of the greatest heroes ever invented where myth and reality are hopelessly intertwined. Many might think it difficult to say anything new about these two protean characters, but Ma. Odette Canivell succeeds through a novel approach that compares and contrasts not only the two heroes themselves but also their evolution in literature.
— Victor Bulmer-Thomas, Honorary Professor, Institute of the Americas, University College London
Maria Canivell turns what could be a simple comparatist literary history into a fiercely passionate vindication of Don Quixote as a national hero, by dint of his political skepticism, blind self-perception, and philosophical streak. In her reckoning, the better-known and existentially secure King Arthur takes second place, precisely due to his certainty about human affairs. Throughout this well-considered and immaculate study surfaces a manifesto, an act of advocacy. If Don Quixote had an attorney, it would be Canivell. Ranging from Heidegger to Mitsubishi, Otto Rank to Disney, this author's study argues that heroes are marketed as much as they are created. Along the way, the histories of Spain and England are examined as fashioning these two heroes who, paradoxically, serve as precursors of those nations.
— Johnny Payne, Mount Saint Mary's University
Energetic and thought-provoking. I have always thought that the Spaniards and the English (I choose these terms carefully and deliberately) are each the other’s favorite historical rival and Other. It was an inspired idea to compare two such great national fictional heroes, Alonso and Arthur, and María Canivell’s analysis brings out not only the contrasts between these popular characters but, even more significantly, between the two countries that gave them life and still revere them.
— Gerald Martin, University of Pittsburgh
In Literary Narratives and the Cultural Imagination,Maria Odette Canivell presents a fascinating account of the evolution of “national heroes” who embody the traits to which their respective nations aspired, and who in doing so affect the “life, perception, and imaginations” of the nations they serve. The figure of King Arthur emerged from dim history into legend and literature to represent virtues of the monarchy and eventually British national pride, tradition, and optimism. The entirely literary figure of Don Quijote represented a great nation in decline, suffering from the loss of empire and economic hardship, desiring to fight reality with dreams. Canivell’s comparison of these characters combines meticulous scholarship and a deep love of her subject to produce a lively and informative study.
— Robert Hoskins, Professor Emeritus, James Madison University