Friday, January 9, 2015

Cervantes Syndrome

Miguel de Cervantes was an interesting, seemingly flighty character, who worked for the government in Spain (between jail visits) and wrote one of the foundational works for modern, western literature.

"The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha" often truncated to simply "Don Quixote" was one of the later renaissance works and one of few produced by Cervantes. It was published as two separate parts, the first released in 1605 and second ten years later and is the caricaturized story of a man, disenchanted with his modern life who dons a new identity and sets out on a quest to restore chivalry (much to the dismay of his friends and family who assume he has gone mad). The inspiration for this quest however is not madness as his family suggests, but the content of many books he has read that highlight chivalrous acts.


In fact, our hero was quite the bookworm. Even our narrator admits, "finally, from so little sleeping and so much reading, his brain dried up and he went completely out of his mind." This is significant personally, as I can relate to family chastisement for book-worminess, but is also significant in the larger context of the renaissance. This novel comes near the end of the period, and centers a new medium at the heart of the story: physical novels. The printed word had recently begun to permeate European life, and the novels of chivalry and brainless romance that were popular in previous periods are mocked in Cervantes' brilliant satire. I recognized my own unrelated follies in the endearing naiveté of Quixote, and can only imagine the reception of those who were openly mocked.

The clever style and subject of Cervantes' novel absolutely holds in our day. The poignancy of the meta-narrative is applicable to each new creative outlet, and as I scroll through my Twitter feed appreciating users who joke about people who use Twitter, I laugh as I suffer from rasin-brain also known as dried brain also known as Cervantes Syndrome.

1 comment:

  1. I suppose cervantes syndrome does exist today. Only like you were saying Twitter (or something like Twitter) instead of books if causing it today. I would replace the books talked about in the quote like this: "finally, from so little sleeping and so much [Twittering], his brain dried up and he went completely out of his mind." Seems applicable.

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