A Don Quixote Novel Analysis Using Biographical Context

A Don Quixote Novel Analysis
Using Biographical Context 
   

Don Quixote is a rather lengthy fictional parody written by Miguel De Cervantes.
The main character, Don Quixote, becomes so fascinated by chivalrous romances that
he loses his wits and sets out on his very own mission as a heroic knight. He
persuades Sancho Panza to come along as his faithful squire on his "journey" to
defend the less fortunate and defeat evil. The novel goes on to tell the stories of their
many experiences on this quest. It is thought to be pretty obvious that Don Quixote,
Cervantes' most famous work, satirizes chivalry romances; however, the underlying
message in his work is the battle between reason and faith.
Cervantes makes it very evident that his intent in writing this novel is to make fun of
the popular chivalric romances at the time he wrote it. In his own prologue, he states,
"for the entire work is an attack upon the books of chivalry" (1675). And as if that
statement was not clear enough, the beginning line in chapter one says, "In a village of
La Mancha the name of which I have no desire to recall, there lived not so long ago"
(1676). This has a clear similarity to the usual intro to romantic stories that usually
begin with "In the city of [blank], long, long ago there lived a princess...". Cervantes
also highlights the ridiculous style of writing in romantic novels when he writes "the
famous Feliciano de Silvia, whose lucid prose style when he said "The reason of the
unreason that afflicts my reason" (1677). This line is very obviously the opposite of
lucid, which further proves his point that people are un-mindedly reading these novels.
However, even though his original intention was to make fun of the popularity of
chivalric romance, it could be thought that the message between the line was the
battle between faith and reason.
Cervantes had a great influencer, Erasmus of Rotterdam, who was "the greatest
scholar of the northern Renaissance" (Tracy). He wrote editions of the New Testament,
so it is safe to assume he was a religious man. However, he believed that your
relationship with God is unique to the individual and you are not required to participate
in church or ceremony. The Renaissance Era that Cervantes lived in was the age of
logic and reason and a lot of people started to question the religious ideals they had
followed for so long. Cervantes could have been having his own internal struggle with
the separation between logic and faith. This struggle is shown throughout his major
work with the two contrasting main characters. Don Quixote, the idealist who
fantasizes fiction verses Sancho Panza, the realist who sees the world as it is, these
two characters represent his own self-battle of idealist and realist views, respectively.
The idealist character, Don Quixote, transforms into less of a comedic fictional
character and more of an influencer. For example, at the beginning of the novel, many
characters try to persuade Quixote to stray away from his unconventional view of life
as a knight. However, to be able to communicate with him they must play along in his
fictional world. I think the inability to change Don Quixote's idealist view of life reflects
that ultimately Cervantes relies on faith rather than logic when deciding what is the
truth.
By the end of the story, despite the immediate desire to change Quixote's way of
thinking, all of the characters achieve a harmonious relationship with him as they
accept his ideas and values. On the surface, as I have already mentioned, this work is
a mockery of the chivalric novels of this time; however, the underlying reason
Cervantes wrote this story was to express his own conflict of faith and logic. Even
though this reason is unknown, it could be considered that the understanding the
characters show towards Don Quixote and his idealist values portray that he himself sees faith as the truth in an era that began to question the ideas of religion.
                                                          
                                    GONZAGA,LIEZEL MUGAS

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