Prostituidas por el Texto looks at the role of prostitution in female picaresque novels and also in Don Quijote. Also included are etiquette manuals that offer rules ranging from how to be the perfect wife and daughter, to advice on using make-up. Zafra also considers legal measures and moral treatises that define the boundaries of sin. Her analysis discusses the lesser evil that the presence of prostitutes represents for society, as well as, the concern for the public good that led to its legal eradication in 1623. Zafra's research demonstrates that the discourse on early modern prostitution present in literary and extra-literary sources informs us of more than the sexual practices allowed to prostitutes, and therefore, is part of a larger discourse on the regulation of women's behavior. She points out that moralists, preachers, legislators, and writers participated in this on-going discourse on prostitution, women, and sex.
Índice
Introducción
Capítulo uno: Discurso prostibulario y la creación literaria de la pícara-prostituta
Capítulo dos: Literatura como fenómeno social ante el debate sobre la prostitución: La prostituta y su función literaria en La pícara Justina
Capítulo tres: El uso literario de la prostituta y la prostitución en Don Quijote: Las “mujeres libres”
Capítulo cuatro: El mundo de la prostitución en La Lozana andaluza y Vida y costumbres de la madre Andrea
Capítulo cinco: Salas Barbadillo y Zayas: Dos aproximaciones al discurso de la picaresca
Conclusión
Notas
Apéndice: Traducciones
Obras citadas
Índice alfabético
Enriqueta Zafra, Trent University, Canada, is originally from Spain. She has a forthcoming article, "Teaching the Role of Prostitution in the Female Picaresque and The Picaresque Tradition" as part of the Modern Language Association Collection on Approaches to Teaching.