ABSTRACT

Since its publication nearly eight decades ago, the consensus among scholars about Fábula de Equis y Zeda, by the Spanish poet Gerardo Diego (1896-1987) remains unchanged: Fábula is an enigmatic avant-garde curiosity. It seems to rob the reader of the reason necessary to interpret it, even as it lures him or her ineluctably to the task; nevertheless, the present study makes the case that this work is, in fact, not inaccessible, and that what the anhelante arquitecto, intended with his masterpiece was a creation myth that explains the evolution of music in his day. This monograph unlocks the fullness of the poem´s meaning sourced in music’s mythical consciousness and expressed in a poetic idiom that replicates aesthetic concepts and cubist strategies of form embraced by the neoclassical composers Bartok, Falla, Ravel, and Stravinsky.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

part I|47 pages

Foundations of Diego’s Creation Myth

chapter 1|11 pages

Three Guiding Questions

chapter 2|15 pages

Theory and Criticism

chapter 3|19 pages

Manual de espumas as Incubator of Fábula

part II|130 pages

Fábula de Equis y Zeda

chapter 4|5 pages

The Framework

chapter 5|11 pages

“Brindis”

chapter 6|34 pages

“Exposición”

chapter 7|37 pages

“Amor”

chapter 8|34 pages

“Desenlace”

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion