
Course | Reading Don Quixote with Marina Brownlee | Virtual
Since 1605 Cervantes’s Don Quixote has been read as an icon of idealistic and misguided desire and as a meme of human experience, modernity, the novel, and more. Close readings and cultural contexts will enable us to enjoy Cervantes’s experimental creation and to consider why it continues to captivate its readers.
The Rosenbach holds a significant Cervantes collection, and we will share images of this collection during the seminar.

Course | Reading Don Quixote with Marina Brownlee | Virtual
Since 1605 Cervantes’s Don Quixote has been read as an icon of idealistic and misguided desire and as a meme of human experience, modernity, the novel, and more. Close readings and cultural contexts will enable us to enjoy Cervantes’s experimental creation and to consider why it continues to captivate its readers.
The Rosenbach holds a significant Cervantes collection, and we will share images of this collection during the seminar.

Course | Reading Don Quixote with Marina Brownlee | Virtual
Since 1605 Cervantes’s Don Quixote has been read as an icon of idealistic and misguided desire and as a meme of human experience, modernity, the novel, and more. Close readings and cultural contexts will enable us to enjoy Cervantes’s experimental creation and to consider why it continues to captivate its readers.
The Rosenbach holds a significant Cervantes collection, and we will share images of this collection during the seminar.

Course | Reading Don Quixote with Marina Brownlee | Virtual
Since 1605 Cervantes’s Don Quixote has been read as an icon of idealistic and misguided desire and as a meme of human experience, modernity, the novel, and more. Close readings and cultural contexts will enable us to enjoy Cervantes’s experimental creation and to consider why it continues to captivate its readers.
The Rosenbach holds a significant Cervantes collection, and we will share images of this collection during the seminar.

Course | Reading Don Quixote with Marina Brownlee | Virtual
Since 1605 Cervantes’s Don Quixote has been read as an icon of idealistic and misguided desire and as a meme of human experience, modernity, the novel, and more. Close readings and cultural contexts will enable us to enjoy Cervantes’s experimental creation and to consider why it continues to captivate its readers.
The Rosenbach holds a significant Cervantes collection, and we will share images of this collection during the seminar.