November 2021 saw the publication of 'A Companion to Calderón de la Barca', edited by Jonathan Thacker, King Alfonso XIII Professor of Spanish Studies and Fellow of Exeter College and Roy Norton, Senior Research Fellow at Pembroke College.
Pedro Calderón de la Barca (1600-1681) is one of the most important dramatists - many would say the single most important dramatist - of the Spanish Golden Age. Spain's dominant and most prestigious playwright for much of the seventeenth century, his work is still regularly staged and translated, influential in more recent times on writers as diverse as Schiller, Shelley and Lorca. The author of around 120 plays (not counting his numerous Corpus Christi 'autos') in a variety of styles, Calderón is most famous for his stirring dramas, characterized by rhetorically powerful poetry, dramatic structures carefully calibrated to produce poignant echoes, and the fizzing intellectual energy they apply to the age's ontological, eschatological and political preoccupations. His plays succeed in combining these perennial concerns with compelling plots subtle enough to defy definitive interpretation.
The' Companion' is the first comprehensive study of Calderón in English. It provides a rigorous but readable introduction to the man, his work and its legacy. Its chapters - written by leading international 'comedia' specialists - provide an overview of his life, explain his intellectual, social, moral, and literary contexts, and examine his stagecraft, his corpus, and his reception both within and without the Hispanic world up to the twenty-first century. Specific chapters are devoted to 'La vida es sueño', his most famous work, which appears on many a university syllabus, and to his infamous wife-murder plays. Calderón is studied by all first-year Spanish students at Oxford and many choose to continue to study his plays in subsequent years.
Contributors to the volume include several academics from the Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages at Oxford.