Sancho Panza
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Sancho Panza ("panza" means paunch or belly, it is alternately spelled Pança) is squire to Don Quixote in the novel of that name. Don Quixote, written by Spanish author Miguel de Cervantes in 1602, is often considered the first true novel. Sancho's comments throughout the novel, known as sanchismos, are a panoply of broad humor, ironic Spanish proverbs, and earthy wit.
Don Quixote pokes gentle fun at the great Spanish hero El Cid and employs satire to comment on the political expansionism of the time. Sancho Panza offers interpolated narrative voice throughout the tale, a literary convention invented by Cervantes. Sancho Panza is precursor to "the sidekick," and is symbolic of practicality over idealism. Sancho is Everyman, who, though not sharing his master's delusional "enchantment," remains his ever-faithful companion realist. Don Quixote comments on the historical state and condition of Aragón and Castilla, which are vying for power in Europe. Sancho Panza represents, among other things, the quintessentially Spanish brand of scepticism of the period.
Don Quixote, an impoverished hidalgo (landowner of petit nobility) becomes 'enchanted' by virtue of descending into his imagination reading too many romances. He awakens in a delusional dream wherein he embarks upon an "adventurous" journey through La Mancha to rescue a Fair Maiden (la donçella Dulcinea). Quixote's imagination turns Sancho from devoted, if somewhat simple, manservant into a squire, even as he transforms himself from impoverished hidalgo to valiant knight.
Sancho, Don Quixote's actual manservant, follows his master, puzzled but obedient. Riding a mule, he helps el Quixote get out of scrapes while blithely looking forward to rewards of aventura that Quixote tells him of. Don Quixote, become the aventurante knight errant "el" Quixote astride a nag, which he renames Rocinante (galloper, swift runner). He has with him a flea-bitten dog, which his dream recasts as a prized hunting greyhound.
Literary functions of Sancho in the second book, Segunda parte del ingenioso caballero Don Quixote de la Mancha (1615)
- Role of Sancho's name.
- Wherein Panza is a developing Everyman type noted by Sigmund Freud and Nietzsche, and a commentary on surnames, Cervantes variously names Sancho in the original (first) book (1602), e.g. Sancho Zancas (legs). The second book (1615) standardizes Sancho's name in reply to the Quixote sequel.
- At one juncture, Sancho alludes to the "false" Avellaneda book by addressing his wife (standardized as Teresa Panza) using the wrong name. The Sancho name does not change, but he calls his wife various names throughout the first part of the volume, and her 'true' name is not revealed until almost the end of that portion of the novel.
- The promised ínsula.
- Ricote
- When Don Quixote takes to his deathbed, Sancho tries to cheer him. Sancho idealistically proposes they become pastoral shepherds and thus becomes 'Quixotized'.
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