Publications
Peer-reviewed monographs
Valencia, Felipe. The Melancholy Void: Lyric and Masculinity in the Age of Góngora. University of Nebraska Press, 2021.
Peer-reviewed articles
Valencia, Felipe. “Sincerity, Fiction, and the Space of Lyric in the Silerio Episode of La Galatea (1585) by Miguel de Cervantes.” Hispanic Review, vol. 88, no. 2, 2020, pp. 111-32.
Valencia, Felipe. “The Female Body of Sor Juana’s Subject and the Language of Gongorism in Epinicio al virrey conde de Galve (1691).” El autor en la modernidad, edited by Emre Özmen and Tania Padilla, special issue of Theory Now, vol. 2, no. 1, 2019, pp. 103-19.
Valencia, Felipe. “‘Amorosa violencia’: Sor Juana’s Theory of the Lyric.” Sor Juana y su lírica menor, edited by Francisco Ramírez Santacruz, special issue of Romance Notes, vol. 58, no. 2, 2018, pp. 299-310.
Valencia, Felipe. “Furor, industria y límites de la palabra poética en La Numancia (1585) de Cervantes.” El teatro profano del siglo XVI, edited by Julio Vélez-Sainz, special issue of Criticón, vol. 126, 2016, pp. 97-110.
Valencia, Felipe. “‘No se puede reducir a continuado término’: Cervantes and the Poetic Persona.” Calíope: Journal of the Society for Renaissance and Baroque Hispanic Poetry, vol. 21, no. 1, 2016, pp. 81-106.
Valencia, Felipe. “Las ‘muchas (aunque bárbaras)’ voces líricas de La Araucana y la índole poética de una ‘historia verdadera’.” Revista de Estudios Hispánicos, vol. 49, no. 1, 2015, pp. 147-71.
Valencia, Felipe. “‘Acoged blandamente mi suspiro’: El beso de almas en la poesía petrarquista española del siglo XVI.” Dicenda: Cuadernos de Filología Hispánica, vol. 26, 2008, pp. 259-90.
Book reviews in academic journals
Valencia, Felipe. Review of The Potency of Pastoral in the Hispanic Baroque, by Anne Holloway. Bulletin of the Comediantes, vol. 72, no. 1, 2020, pp. 157-59.
Valencia, Felipe. Review of Love in the Poetry of Francisco de Aldana: Beyond Neoplatonism, by Paul Joseph Lennon. Creneida: Anuario de Literaturas Hispánicas, vol. 8, 2020, pp. 353-58.
Valencia, Felipe. Review of Poesía y materialidad, edited by Albert Lloret and Miguel Martínez. Ecdotica, vol. 16, 2019, pp. 285-91.
Valencia, Felipe. Review of Garcilaso de la Vega and the Material Culture of Renaissance Europe, by Mary E. Barnard. Symposium: A Quarterly Journal in Modern Literatures, vol. 71, no. 2, 2017, pp. 108-11.
Valencia, Felipe. Review of Love Poetry in the Spanish Golden Age: Eros, Eris and Empire, by Isabel Torres. Revista de estudios hispánicos, vol. 48, no. 3, 2014, pp. 43-46.
Valencia, Felipe. Review of Baroque Horrors: Roots of the Fantastic in the Age of Curiosities, by David R. Castillo, and Hyperboles: The Rhetoric of Excess in Baroque Literature and Thought, by Christopher D. Johnson. Calíope: Journal of the Society for Renaissance and Baroque Hispanic Poetry, vol. 18, no. 3, 2013, pp. 165-70.
Valencia, Felipe. Review of An Erotic Philology of Golden Age Spain, by Adrienne Laskier Martín. Dicenda: Cuadernos de Filología Hispánica, vol. 29, 2011, pp. 331-33.
Projects
Currently I am at work on two book projects and three shorter essays. The first book project is a single-authored monograph, titled A Companion to Luis de Góngora, which aims to provide a broad public—ranging from advanced undergraduates to scholars in early modern Hispanic studies—with an accessible, reliable, and substantial discussion of the verse of Luis de Góngora (1561-1627) and its impact on Hispanic poetry of the seventeenth and twentieth centuries. The second is a collection of essays, co-edited with Professor Elizabeth Rhodes, on the hiddenness of sexual violence in early modern Hispanic literature.
A third book project, rather long-term, is a single-authored monograph, titled The Matter with Angelica in Early Modern Spanish Literature, that will examine the issues surrounding gender, ethnicity, sincerity, and satire that Angelica, the character from Boiardo and Ariosto’s epics, raises in Aldana’s “Medoro y Angélica,” Luis Barahona de Soto’s Las lágrimas de Angélica, Lope de Vega’s La hermosura de Angélica, and Cervantes’s La casa de los celos and Don Quijote.
As to the shorter essays, one is a long article on melancholy, rape, and the gendering of poetics in the Desengaños amorosos (1647) by María de Zayas. Another, written in collaboration with Professor Imogen Choi, addresses Alonso de Ercilla’s engagement with neo-Senecan tragedy in the third part of La Araucana (1589-90). A third essay, intended for the volume On the Uses and Abuses of Early Modern Spanish Culture edited by Chad Leahy, examines the motives and consequences of the failure of scholarship of the sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Spanish poems that deploy the myth of Daphne and Apollo to recognize the rape at its core.