is this the first known work of literary postmodernism?
loaded question
Careful with these big words, kiddo.
>>8353059
>experimentation with form
>metafiction
>intertextual reference
>bridging of high and low culture
>skepticism of metanarratives
>>8353069
>postmodernism
Key word: "post"
IS DON QUIXOTE POMO OR NO? FUCKING ANSWER
>>8354671
yes (no)
>>8353058
It is the first work of anything desu
>>8353069
you could have said that with one word
>ironic
>don quick-sowtee
All literature is technically post-modern
The modern detention of it it has changed in the last 15-20 years however
>>8353058
define postmodernism
>>8353058
>it came BEFORE modernism
>is it POSTmodernism, guys?!?!?!
>>8355122
enjoying summer vacation from high school?
>>8354185
This guy is a triple retard because he isn't being constructive when he could have. I'm only saying that because I'm bored of you being the number three times the concept of retardation. You could've made up a reason to love everything!
>>8355082
Don Kwik-sōte
>annual visit to check if I want to restart browsing /lit/
>see this thread
see you again in another year or two boyos
>>8355218
lmao js fucking kys kfc
i think it's rather the first known work of egaliterian digimodernism, though one might also see some proto-duginian elements (a lot is lost in translation, make sure you read it in spanish).
is don quixote one book or two book or three book and if it's three book how come it only one book on shelf and how come it cost a lots of and the money also is it don quixote or don qkeyoaty
>>8355593
Lmao.
>>8355218
Don't be so quick to judge. You didn't see our daily thread on Schopenhauers On Women.
Along with Machiavelli, Francis Bacon, and Shakespeare, Cervantes founded the literary possibility of the modern world in a forward-reaching way. Like all founders he went far beyond his time. So in some sense, literally yes.
>>8353069
>postmodernism is characterized by a set of literary techniques, not an assortment of ideas and ideals.
Nigga wat.
>>8355734
>Machiavelli
That's not Rabelais, my man
>>8354671
no (yes)