Drama & Ethos: Natural-law Ethics in Spanish Golden Age Theater

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University Press of Kentucky, 1975 - Literary Criticism - 120 pages

Spanish Golden Age drama as an expression of morality falls between the extremes of art-for-art's-sake and utilitarianism. According to Spanish literary critics of the 16th and 17th centuries, drama imitated reality, the subject and domain of philosophy. The integration of drama and scholastic moral philosophy was an important aspect of the critical theory of this era, which held that art should both teach and delight.

Through close textual analysis of representative plays, this book examines the artistic fusion of natural-law philosophy and drama. It demonstrates the relationship between ethics and the central ideological themes of these works, illustrating that an awareness of the doctrines of natural law ethics is crucial to an enriched comprehension of the drama of Golden Age Spain.

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Contents

Fuenteovejuna
14
La mejor espigadera
23
The Auto Sacramental
38
Copyright

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About the author (1975)

Robert L. Fiore is associate professor of Spanish at Michigan State University.

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