The Aesthetic Turn in Cervantes broadens our understanding of this transformative period. Susan Byrne examines a little-known legal treatise published in 1600 that defended artists’ rights and served as a rallying cry for writers in Madrid. The book investigates early efforts to define creative writing as “good,” “human,” or “polished” letters, foreshadowing the mid-seventeenth-century French concept of belles lettres. Byrne closely analyses Cervantes’s exploration of key aesthetic themes, including sensory experience, the interplay between sentiment and reason, the role of imagination in art, and the complex nature of truth and beauty.
Ultimately, the book illuminates how Cervantes gradually reconceptualized art and its truths as fully human expressions throughout his lifetime, both formally and substantively.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Early Modern Aesthetics
1. Aesthetics and the Arts in Spain
2. Labels for Creative Letters
3. Narrative Truths
4. Sensory Truth: Sight and Hearing
5. Intellectual Truth: Imagination and Understanding
6. The Truth about Beauty
7. Jesuit Canon Formation
Conclusion: The Aesthetic Turn(s)
Notes
Bibliography
Index