1st Edition
The Figure of Ganymede in Early Modern Spanish Comedias
1 Introduction: Ganymede’s Good/Bad Romance | The Figure of Ganymede From Antiquity to the Early Modern Era
2 The Political Ganymede
2.1 Political (In)Credibility: La hermosa Alfreda (1598–1600) as Forewarning of Artistic and Privados’ Deception
2.2 Political Liaisons: Lope de Vega’s Las mujeres sin hombres (1613–18) as Metaphor of Habsburg Dynastic Marriages
2.3 Political Education: Advising a Young King in Lope de Vega’s La mayor victoria (1615–24)
2.4 A Political Hunt for Ganymede: Queer Space and Juan Ruiz de Alarcon’s Los favores del mundo (c. 1616–17)
3 The Moral/Religious Ganymede
3.1 A Moral Dilemma: Early Modern Mythographers and the Case of Lope de Vega’s La escolástica celosa (1596–1602)
3.2 “Claiming” the Moral High Ground: Tirso de Molina’s Religious La mejor espigadera (1614) and the Joys of the Pagan
3.3 Loose Morals: Andres de Claramonte’s La ciudad sin Dios, o El inobediente (1652) and the Insertion of Ganymede
3.4 Zipper Moral: The Multifaceted Character of Ismael in Tirso de Molina’s La prudencia en la mujer (1634)
4 The Sexual Ganymede
4.1 Early Modern Sexual (Mis)Conduct: Ganymede Through His Escapades
4.2 Sexual Minorities: Sodomites and Incest in Lope de Vega’s Adonis y Venus (1597–1603) and Its Forgotten Interlude
4.3 Sexual Ambiguity: Cross-Dressed Same-Sex Desires in Lope de Vega’s El gallardo catalán (1599–1603)
4.4 Sexual Tension: Reconstructing and Reinterpreting a “Feminine” Ganymede in Ana Caro’s Valor, agravio y mujer (c. 1635)
5 Epilogue: The Final Journey Home or the Paratextual Ganymede
Biography
Felipe E. Rojas is Associate Professor of Spanish at West Liberty University, United States. He earned his PhD from the University of Chicago in 2014. His research focuses on early modern Spanish literature, with interests in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century theater, queer and gay studies, classical mythology, and the intersections of politics, religion, and sexuality in Early Modern Spain. His work explores veiled sexual references on the early modern stage and how these coded expressions engage with Spain’s political, religious, and historical transformations. His scholarship also delves into areas such as the role of children’s games in literature and their cultural significance.






