When an Image is Not Worth a Thousand Words: Divergent Codes of Representation of Death and the Afterlife in Francisco de Quevedo’s Satirical Works and the Art of Hieronymus Bosch

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When an Image is Not Worth a Thousand Words: Divergent Codes of Representation of Death and the Afterlife in Francisco de Quevedo’s Satirical Works and the Art of Hieronymus Bosch

Alternative title

Death and Afterlife in the Early Modern Hispanic World. 7: When an Image is Not Worth a Thousand Words: Divergent Codes of Representation of Death and the Afterlife in Francisco de Quevedo’s Satirical Works and the Art of Hieronymus Bosch

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2010

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Hispanic Issues Series

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Article

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Death and Afterlife in the Early Modern Hispanic World. Editors: John Beusterien, Constance Cortez. Hispanic Issues On Line, Volume 7 (Fall 2010). 1 online resource (PDF, page 126-143, includes illustrations)

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Pereira-Muro, Carmen. (2010). When an Image is Not Worth a Thousand Words: Divergent Codes of Representation of Death and the Afterlife in Francisco de Quevedo’s Satirical Works and the Art of Hieronymus Bosch. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/182928.

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