Abstract
Fecha de recepción: 6 de septiembre de 2015.
Fecha de aceptación: 10 de noviembre de 2015.
The song “No lo puedo desir desire” (NC 1856), dating from the middle of the 16th century, takes the basic form of a zéjel to recreate the defiant anticlericalism of the age and to use satire to make fun of a representative of the church, apparently a monk. The criticism of the cleric underlines the defects in his behavior. This analysis identifies the way in which the satire is constructed and the contextual references that allow us to understand the satire and formulate possible interpretations.
Nueva Revista de Filología Hispánica (1947-), volume 66, 2, July-December 2018, is a semi-annual publication edited by El Colegio de México, Carretera Picacho Ajusco 20, Ampliación Fuentes del Pedregal, Tlalpan, C.P. 14110, Mexico City, Mexico, Tel. (55) 5449-3000, http://nrfh.colmex.mx/index.php/NRFH, nrfh@colmex.mx. Editor: Pedro Martín Butragueño. Assistant editors: Alejandro Rivas and Jesus Jorge Valenzuela. All Rights Reserved: 04-2015-070112341900-203, ISSN (print): 0185-0121, ISSN (electronic): 2448-6558, as registered with the National Copyright Institute. Typographical composition: El Atril Tipográfico. Person in charge of updating this issue: Perla Reyna Muñoz; date of last update: June 26, 2018.
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