Contexto histórico y tratamiento literario de la "hechicería" morisca y judía en el Persiles

  1. Díez Fernández, J. Ignacio
  2. Aguirre de Cárcer Casarrubios, Luisa Fernanda
Revista:
Cervantes: Bulletin of the Cervantes Society of America

ISSN: 0277-6995

Año de publicación: 1992

Volumen: 12

Número: 2

Páginas: 33-62

Tipo: Artículo

Otras publicaciones en: Cervantes: Bulletin of the Cervantes Society of America

Resumen

The medical activities of the Moriscos during the Golden Age occupied a shadowy middle ground between their own cultural heritage and the demands of the Christian society in which they lived. That society defended itself against their competition (in a process of increasing corporativism) by legal measures which sought to ban them from officially practicing medicine. For that purpose such distortions as accusations of magic, and hence, of heresy, were used against them. In his Persiles Cervantes distinguishes between sorcery and magic, and develops his ideas, above all, in two case histories: one featuring Moriscos (Cenotia), the other, Jews (the wife of Zabulón). The methods in the two cases differ, although both involve love stories. Cervantes' treatment of the subject is anecdotal, hackneyed, and almost incoherent.