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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: María Soledad BarbónPublisher: University of Notre Dame Press Imprint: University of Notre Dame Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.526kg ISBN: 9780268106454ISBN 10: 0268106452 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 31 October 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsContents List of Abbreviations List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: Celebrating the Monarchy in Bourbon Lima 1. The Politics of Praise 2. Discourses of Loyalty 3. Staging the Incas Epilogue: From the “Very Noble and Loyal” to the “Heroic City of the Free” Works CitedReviews"“Colonial Loyalties: Celebrating the Spanish Monarchy in Eighteenth-Century Lima makes a fascinating and original contribution to the field of colonial Spanish-American studies and a number of related disciplines. The questions the book raises about the performance of loyalty and the politics of praise in an evolving context of viceroyalty, empire, and nation are compelling and timely. María Soledad Barbón uses both canonical authors and previously overlooked archival materials and primary sources to make her argument that Lima’s residents used civic festivities to further their own agendas in ways that reflect both local and imperial realities.” —Karen Stolley, Emory University “Colonial Loyalties is rigorously researched and elegantly conceived, and I learned a great deal in reading it. It is a profound analysis of viceregal celebrations in honor of the Spanish monarchs that breaks new ground. By focusing intently and equally on the textual, performative, and material dimensions of such vehicles of loyalty, María Soledad Barbón gives the genre its just due.” —Ruth Hill, Andrew W. Mellon Chair in the Humanities, Vanderbilt University ""This important book is a valuable contribution to the growing field of the history of early eighteenth-century Spanish political culture and its renewed focus on the connections between the Baroque and the Age of Revolutions. Barbón's study has greatly enriched our understanding of the symbolic political economy of loyalty in the Spanish Empire."" —Bulletin of Latin American Research" “Colonial Loyalties: Celebrating the Spanish Monarchy in Eighteenth-Century Lima makes a fascinating and original contribution to the field of colonial Spanish-American studies and a number of related disciplines. The questions the book raises about the performance of loyalty and the politics of praise in an evolving context of viceroyalty, empire, and nation are compelling and timely. María Soledad Barbón uses both canonical authors and previously overlooked archival materials and primary sources to make her argument that Lima’s residents used civic festivities to further their own agendas in ways that reflect both local and imperial realities.” —Karen Stolley, Emory University “Colonial Loyalties is rigorously researched and elegantly conceived, and I learned a great deal in reading it. It is a profound analysis of viceregal celebrations in honor of the Spanish monarchs that breaks new ground. By focusing intently and equally on the textual, performative, and material dimensions of such vehicles of loyalty, María Soledad Barbón gives the genre its just due.” —Ruth Hill, Andrew W. Mellon Chair in the Humanities, Vanderbilt University ""This important book is a valuable contribution to the growing field of the history of early eighteenth-century Spanish political culture and its renewed focus on the connections between the Baroque and the Age of Revolutions. Barbón's study has greatly enriched our understanding of the symbolic political economy of loyalty in the Spanish Empire."" —Bulletin of Latin American Research ""This study is an outstanding contribution to the burgeoning field of festival studies, and it shows just how rich the colonial Latin American context is for exploring some of the main issues that animate the field. . . .It strikes the right balance between attention to the continuities in festive practices and discourses and an analysis of how they evolved."" —The Americas ""This book explores the world of civic festivals in Bourbon Lima, which consolidated Hispanic monarchical power and helped counter social uprisings. . . .an interesting approach to the study of agency in colonial festivals."" —Hispanic American Historical Review ""Dedicated to the study of the royal festivities in Lima between 1701 and 1790, with an epilogue that extends the analysis until the transition to the republic, Colonial Loyalties constitutes a comprehensive study of the discursive corpus that surrounded these events during what is called the extended century XVIII."" —Colonial Latin American Review Colonial Loyalties is rigorously researched and elegantly conceived, and I learned a great deal in reading it. It is a profound analysis of viceregal celebrations in honor of the Spanish monarchs that breaks new ground. By focusing intently and equally on the textual, performative, and material dimensions of such vehicles of loyalty, Mar a Soledad Barb n gives the genre its just due. --Ruth Hill, Andrew W. Mellon Chair in the Humanities, Vanderbilt University Colonial Loyalties: Celebrating the Spanish Monarchy in Eighteenth-Century Lima makes a fascinating and original contribution to the field of colonial Spanish-American studies and a number of related disciplines. The questions the book raises about the performance of loyalty and the politics of praise in an evolving context of viceroyalty, empire, and nation are compelling and timely. Mar a Soledad Barb n uses both canonical authors and previously overlooked archival materials and primary sources to make her argument that Lima's residents used civic festivities to further their own agendas in ways that reflect both local and imperial realities. --Karen Stolley, Emory University Author InformationMaría Soledad Barbón is an associate professor of comparative literature at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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