@article{TEXTUAL,
      recid = {13867},
      author = {de Armas, Frederick A.},
      title = {Futurities, Empire, and Censorship: Cervantes in  Conversation with Ovid and Orwell},
      journal = {Renaissance Futurities: Science, Art, Invention},
      address = {2019-10-05},
      number = {TEXTUAL},
      abstract = {This chapter, written by Frederick A. de Armas, on Don  Quixote turns to specific futurities, such as the way in  which Cervantes’s visions of censorship and practice of  self-censorship are implicated in future concerns and even  our own. It also points to societal control as it is  reflected in Don Quixote and echoes through different  empires. Cervantes’s novel also points to the way in which  expansionism often leads to perpetual war, the manner in  which fake news seeps into the text, and even the way in  which enhanced interrogation can be formulated. Through  imperial overreach, the novel embodies the declining future  of empire and even echoes Orwellian dystopia.},
      url = {http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/13867},
}