Abstract
This article analyzes the authorship and rewriting of the epic poem Telémaco en la isla de Calipso by Pedro José Bermúdez de la Torre y Solier. Its main objective is to explain the conception and design of this poem while considering its debt to other heroic sagas of the same period. It focuses mainly on the coincidences with the zarzuela También se vengan los dioses by Peruvian writer Lorenzo de las Llamosas and the epic poem Demofonte y Filis, allegedly written by the Franciscan friar António das Chagas. Subsequent objectives propose a comparison between Bermudez’s poem and the novel Les aventures de Telémaque by François Fénelon as a pivotal source. Furthermore, it is possible to contrast a series of diverse dramatic works produced and represented in eighteenth-century Spain, such as those written by José de Cañizares, Eusebio Vela, Domingo Rossi, and other anonymous playwrights. The conclusions rely on the problematic rewriting process and the legacy that the literary hero Telemachus carried both in epic poems and dramas of the seventeenth and eighteenth century.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have