What Would Cervantes Do?
Navigating Post-Truth with Spanish Baroque Literature
William Egginton author David Castillo author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press
Published:15th Jan '22
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- Paperback£25.99(9780228008156)
How the humanities can save us from the plague of disinformation.
A timely meditation on the key role the humanities must play in dissecting and combatting all forms of disinformation. Castillo and Egginton offer a tour-de-force commentary on politics and popular culture through critical comparative readings of Western cultural texts of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries and those of the Spanish Golden Age.
The attack on the US Capitol on 6 January 2021 was a tragic illustration of the existential threat that the viral spread of disinformation poses in the age of social media and twenty-four-hour news. From climate change denialism to the frenzied conspiracy theories and racist mythologies that fuel antidemocratic white nationalist movements in the United States and abroad, What Would Cervantes Do? is a lucid meditation on the key role the humanities must play in dissecting and combatting all forms of disinformation.
David Castillo and William Egginton travel back to the early modern period, the first age of inflationary media, in search of historically tested strategies to overcome disinformation and shed light on our post-truth market. Through a series of critical conversations between cultural icons of the twenty-first century and those of the Spanish Golden Age, What Would Cervantes Do? provides a tour-de-force commentary on current politics and popular culture. Offering a diverse range of Cervantist comparative readings of contemporary cultural texts –movies, television shows, and infotainment – alongside ideas and issues from literary and cultural texts of early modern Spain, Castillo and Egginton present a new way of unpacking the logic of contemporary media.
What Would Cervantes Do? is an urgent and timely self-help manual for literary scholars and humanists of all stripes, and a powerful toolkit for reality literacy.
“What Would Cervantes Do? is a persuasive exercise in making comparisons, and an enlightening guide both to seventeenth-century Spain and to our current circumstances.” Times Literary Supplement
“Castillo and Egginton are state-of-the-art readers of early modern Spanish literature and diligent investigators, well versed in theory. Castillo and Egginton recognize, eloquently and convincingly, that the baroque sensibility of 17th-century Spain – self-consciously obscure – can help to explain, or further complicate, the ups and downs of today’s world and media. Highly recommended.” Choice
“The volume closes with a section whose title could well serve as a metonymy for the entire book: “A Cervantine Toolkit for the Post-Truth Age.” The authors analyze, among other related phenomena, the extreme commodification of information on social media, which has led to “our current, deeply siloed version of the Internet [which is] the perfect marketplace of alt-realities”. Ultimately, WWCD emphasizes the crucial role of the humanities in addressing and combating misinformation.” Cervantes: Journal of the Cervantes Society of America
ISBN: 9780228008149
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
216 pages