The Scandal (Spanish: El escándalo) is an 1875 novel by the Spanish writer Pedro Antonio de Alarcón.
Author | Pedro Antonio de Alarcón |
---|---|
Original title | El escándalo |
Language | Spanish |
Publication date | 1875 |
Publication place | Spain |
Plot
editSet in Madrid in 1861, the novel is about a wealthy libertine, Fabián Conde, who reveals the intrigues and mishaps of his bourgeois life during a confession with a Jesuit priest.
Reception
editAt its publication, the novel upset some Spanish liberals, with whom Alarcón previously had been involved, for its perceived pro-Jesuit theme and conservative, anti-bourgeois politics. It received negative reviews from Emilia Pardo Bazán, Leopoldo Alas, Manuel de la Revilla and Armando Palacio Valdés. In his 1881 book Historia de mis libros, Alarcón responded to this reception and argued it was unjustified and based on overly political interpretations of dramaturgical considerations.[1][2]
Adaptations
editThe Scandal was the basis for the 1934 Mexican film The Scandal directed by Chano Urueta[3] and the 1943 Spanish film The Scandal directed by José Luis Sáenz de Heredia.[4]
References
edit- ^ Sierra, Sarah (2014). "Review of El escándalo, by Pedro Antonio de Alarcón". Anales Galdosianos. 49: 139–140. doi:10.1353/ang.2014.0001.
- ^ Cate-Arries, Francie (1989). "Pedro de Alarcón's 'El Escándalo': Text and Pre-text". Hispanófila (95): 13–20. JSTOR 43808215.
- ^ Wilt, David E. (2004). The Mexican Filmography: 1916 through 2001. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-7864-6122-6.
- ^ Labanyi, Jo & Pavlović, Tatjana. A Companion to Spanish Cinema. John Wiley & Sons, 2012. p. 236