The Spanish Element in Our Nationality”: Spain and America at the World’s Fairs and Centennial Celebrations, 1876–1915

Author:   M. Elizabeth Boone (Professor of History of Art, University of Alberta)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Volume:   10
ISBN:  

9780271083315


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   09 December 2019
Format:   Hardback
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The Spanish Element in Our Nationality”: Spain and America at the World’s Fairs and Centennial Celebrations, 1876–1915


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Author:   M. Elizabeth Boone (Professor of History of Art, University of Alberta)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Volume:   10
Dimensions:   Width: 20.30cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 25.40cm
Weight:   1.179kg
ISBN:  

9780271083315


ISBN 10:   027108331
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   09 December 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction 1 Inventing America at the 1876 Philadelphia Centennial 2 Defining (and Defending) Spain in Barcelona and Paris, 1888 and 1889 3 Marginalizing Spain (and Embracing Cuba) at the 1893 Columbian Exposition 4 Reasserting Spain in America at the 1910 Centennial Exhibitions 5 Using Spain to Ignore Mexicans at the 1915 California Fairs Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

A wonderfully detailed investigation of the shaping of Spain's national-ethnic identity through several key international exhibitions with art in the United States and Latin America. Drawing upon unpublished archival sources, the engaging study analyzes the strategies of, and the international stakes for administrators, statespersons, and critics from different nations. This book offers readers an indispensable understanding of the politics of display in the creation and reception of these exhibitions. -Oscar E. Vazquez, author of The End Again: Degeneration and Visual Culture in Modern Spain The Spanish Element in Our Nationality mines a wealth of visual and textual evidence from the later 19th and early 20th century world's fairs in order to convincingly demonstrate Spain's marginalization in the construction of an American identity that leaned more heavily toward England. While well-versed in theoretical approaches to its subject and detailed in unraveling the complexities of Spain's reception at world's fairs, Boone's book remains grounded in a careful examination of the fine arts and material culture, and how the visual arts functioned politically in an international context. -David Raizman, coeditor of Expanding Nationalisms at World Fairs: Identity, Diversity and Exchange, 1851-1915 A meticulously researched and engagingly written account of the genesis, the promotion, and also the avoidance of Spanish identity and culture, including in Spain's former colonies. This impressive book is a major contribution to transnational cultural studies, demonstrating Boone's deep and nuanced command of Spanish, Latin American, and U.S. art and culture. -Barbara Brinson Curiel, Humboldt State University Pioneering in every respect, this handsomely-illustrated volume offers unique insights into the extent to which political circumstances, combined with long-standing racial and religious prejudices, frustrated Spain's campaign for recognition of the artistic and creative genius of its people at various world's fairs. The volume is a must for anyone interested in Spain's modern history along with those concerned with attitudes towards the place of both Spanish and Hispanic culture in the United States. -Richard L. Kagan, author of Urban Images of the Hispanic World, 1493-1793 With `The Spanish Element in Our Nationality,' M. Elizabeth Boone confirms her role as the leading interpreter of the complex interactions between the United States and Spain as revealed in the visual arts. This thoroughly researched analysis of key international expositions held between 1876 and 1915 demonstrates the nuances of these trans-Atlantic relations and provides insight into Hispanic/Latinx identity and presence in the United States over a century later. -Katherine Manthorne, editor of California Mexicana: Missions to Murals, 1820-1930


A wonderfully detailed investigation of the shaping of Spain's national-ethnic identity through several key international exhibitions with art in the United States and Latin America. Drawing upon unpublished archival sources, the engaging study analyzes the strategies of, and the international stakes for administrators, statespersons, and critics from different nations. This book offers readers an indispensable understanding of the politics of display in the creation and reception of these exhibitions. -Oscar E. Vazquez, author of The End Again: Degeneration and Visual Culture in Modern Spain The Spanish Element in Our Nationality mines a wealth of visual and textual evidence from the later 19th and early 20th century world's fairs in order to convincingly demonstrate Spain's marginalization in the construction of an American identity that leaned more heavily toward England. While well-versed in theoretical approaches to its subject and detailed in unraveling the complexities of Spain's reception at world's fairs, Boone's book remains grounded in a careful examination of the fine arts and material culture, and how the visual arts functioned politically in an international context. -David Raizman, coeditor of Expanding Nationalisms at World Fairs: Identity, Diversity and Exchange, 1851-1915 A meticulously researched and engagingly written account of the genesis, the promotion, and also the avoidance of Spanish identity and culture, including in Spain's former colonies. This impressive book is a major contribution to transnational cultural studies, demonstrating Boone's deep and nuanced command of Spanish, Latin American, and United States art and culture. -Barbara Brinson Curiel, Humboldt State University Pioneering in every respect, this handsomely-illustrated volume offers unique insights into the extent to which political circumstances, combined with long-standing racial and religious prejudices, frustrated Spain's campaign for recognition of the artistic and creative genius of its people at various world's fairs. The volume is a must for anyone interested in Spain's modern history along with those concerned with attitudes towards the place of both Spanish and Hispanic culture in the United States. -Richard L. Kagan, author of Urban Images of the Hispanic World, 1493-1793 With The Spanish Element in Our Nationality M. Elizabeth Boone confirms her role as the leading interpreter of the complex interactions between the United States and Spain as revealed in the visual arts. This thoroughly researched analysis of key international expositions held between 1876 and 1915 demonstrates the nuances of these trans-Atlantic relations and provides insight into Hispanic/Latinx identity and presence in the US over a century later. -Katherine Manthorne, editor of California Mexicana: Missions to Murals, 1820 to 1930


A wonderfully detailed investigation of the shaping of Spain's national-ethnic identity through several key international exhibitions with art in the United States and Latin America. Drawing upon unpublished archival sources, the engaging study analyzes the strategies of, and the international stakes for administrators, statespersons, and critics from different nations. This book offers readers an indispensable understanding of the politics of display in the creation and reception of these exhibitions. -Oscar E. Vazquez, author of The End Again: Degeneration and Visual Culture in Modern Spain The Spanish Element in Our Nationality mines a wealth of visual and textual evidence from the later 19th and early 20th century world's fairs in order to convincingly demonstrate Spain's marginalization in the construction of an American identity that leaned more heavily toward England. While well-versed in theoretical approaches to its subject and detailed in unraveling the complexities of Spain's reception at world's fairs, Boone's book remains grounded in a careful examination of the fine arts and material culture, and how the visual arts functioned politically in an international context. -David Raizman, coeditor of Expanding Nationalisms at World Fairs: Identity, Diversity and Exchange, 1851-1915 A meticulously researched and engagingly written account of the genesis, the promotion, and also the avoidance of Spanish identity and culture, including in Spain's former colonies. This impressive book is a major contribution to transnational cultural studies, demonstrating Boone's deep and nuanced command of Spanish, Latin American, and U.S. art and culture. -Barbara Brinson Curiel, Humboldt State University Pioneering in every respect, this handsomely-illustrated volume offers unique insights into the extent to which political circumstances, combined with long-standing racial and religious prejudices, frustrated Spain's campaign for recognition of the artistic and creative genius of its people at various world's fairs. The volume is a must for anyone interested in Spain's modern history along with those concerned with attitudes towards the place of both Spanish and Hispanic culture in the United States. -Richard L. Kagan, author of Urban Images of the Hispanic World, 1493-1793 With 'The Spanish Element in Our Nationality,' M. Elizabeth Boone confirms her role as the leading interpreter of the complex interactions between the United States and Spain as revealed in the visual arts. This thoroughly researched analysis of key international expositions held between 1876 and 1915 demonstrates the nuances of these trans-Atlantic relations and provides insight into Hispanic/Latinx identity and presence in the United States over a century later. -Katherine Manthorne, editor of California Mexicana: Missions to Murals, 1820-1930 Special attention is devoted to Spanish art in the 19th century-presented through remarkable plates and photographs-including paintings, architectural displays, and rare materials. -N. Greene, Choice


A wonderfully detailed investigation of the shaping of Spain's national-ethnic identity through several key international exhibitions with art in the United States and Latin America. Drawing upon unpublished archival sources, the engaging study analyzes the strategies of, and the international stakes for administrators, statespersons, and critics from different nations. This book offers readers an indispensable understanding of the politics of display in the creation and reception of these exhibitions. -Oscar E. Vazquez, author of The End Again: Degeneration and Visual Culture in Modern Spain The Spanish Element in Our Nationality mines a wealth of visual and textual evidence from the later 19th and early 20th century world's fairs in order to convincingly demonstrate Spain's marginalization in the construction of an American identity that leaned more heavily toward England. While well-versed in theoretical approaches to its subject and detailed in unraveling the complexities of Spain's reception at world's fairs, Boone's book remains grounded in a careful examination of the fine arts and material culture, and how the visual arts functioned politically in an international context. -David Raizman, coeditor of Expanding Nationalisms at World Fairs: Identity, Diversity and Exchange, 1851-1915 A meticulously researched and engagingly written account of the genesis, the promotion, and also the avoidance of Spanish identity and culture, including in Spain's former colonies. This impressive book is a major contribution to transnational cultural studies, demonstrating Boone's deep and nuanced command of Spanish, Latin American, and U.S. art and culture. -Barbara Brinson Curiel, Humboldt State University Pioneering in every respect, this handsomely-illustrated volume offers unique insights into the extent to which political circumstances, combined with long-standing racial and religious prejudices, frustrated Spain's campaign for recognition of the artistic and creative genius of its people at various world's fairs. The volume is a must for anyone interested in Spain's modern history along with those concerned with attitudes towards the place of both Spanish and Hispanic culture in the United States. -Richard L. Kagan, author of Urban Images of the Hispanic World, 1493-1793 With The Spanish Element in Our Nationality M. Elizabeth Boone confirms her role as the leading interpreter of the complex interactions between the United States and Spain as revealed in the visual arts. This thoroughly researched analysis of key international expositions held between 1876 and 1915 demonstrates the nuances of these trans-Atlantic relations and provides insight into Hispanic/Latinx identity and presence in the United States over a century later. -Katherine Manthorne, editor of California Mexicana: Missions to Murals, 1820-1930


Special attention is devoted to Spanish art in the 19th century-presented through remarkable plates and photographs-including paintings, architectural displays, and rare materials. -N. Greene, Choice With 'The Spanish Element in Our Nationality,' M. Elizabeth Boone confirms her role as the leading interpreter of the complex interactions between the United States and Spain as revealed in the visual arts. This thoroughly researched analysis of key international expositions held between 1876 and 1915 demonstrates the nuances of these trans-Atlantic relations and provides insight into Hispanic/Latinx identity and presence in the United States over a century later. -Katherine Manthorne, editor of California Mexicana: Missions to Murals, 1820-1930 Pioneering in every respect, this handsomely-illustrated volume offers unique insights into the extent to which political circumstances, combined with long-standing racial and religious prejudices, frustrated Spain's campaign for recognition of the artistic and creative genius of its people at various world's fairs. The volume is a must for anyone interested in Spain's modern history along with those concerned with attitudes towards the place of both Spanish and Hispanic culture in the United States. -Richard L. Kagan, author of Urban Images of the Hispanic World, 1493-1793 A meticulously researched and engagingly written account of the genesis, the promotion, and also the avoidance of Spanish identity and culture, including in Spain's former colonies. This impressive book is a major contribution to transnational cultural studies, demonstrating Boone's deep and nuanced command of Spanish, Latin American, and U.S. art and culture. -Barbara Brinson Curiel, Humboldt State University The Spanish Element in Our Nationality mines a wealth of visual and textual evidence from the later 19th and early 20th century world's fairs in order to convincingly demonstrate Spain's marginalization in the construction of an American identity that leaned more heavily toward England. While well-versed in theoretical approaches to its subject and detailed in unraveling the complexities of Spain's reception at world's fairs, Boone's book remains grounded in a careful examination of the fine arts and material culture, and how the visual arts functioned politically in an international context. -David Raizman, coeditor of Expanding Nationalisms at World Fairs: Identity, Diversity and Exchange, 1851-1915 A wonderfully detailed investigation of the shaping of Spain's national-ethnic identity through several key international exhibitions with art in the United States and Latin America. Drawing upon unpublished archival sources, the engaging study analyzes the strategies of, and the international stakes for administrators, statespersons, and critics from different nations. This book offers readers an indispensable understanding of the politics of display in the creation and reception of these exhibitions. -Oscar E. Vazquez, author of The End Again: Degeneration and Visual Culture in Modern Spain This book is groundbreaking and an important tool in helping us all get a richer, more complete, and much more realistic view of the Spanish past and contributions to making the United States what it was to become. -David M. Sokol, Journal of American Culture This book offers the interested reader an excellent gateway to think visual cultures in dialogue with the objective of the nations at the time of the composition of collections that synthesized national imageries and, at the same time, to discover which elements were included and excluded in the consolidation of those canons. From my perspective, it is, in turn, a contribution to think the construction of national patrimony in a way that is more dynamic and attentive to quite different elements and actors. -Paula Bruno, Tapuya


Special attention is devoted to Spanish art in the 19th century-presented through remarkable plates and photographs-including paintings, architectural displays, and rare materials. -N. Greene, Choice With 'The Spanish Element in Our Nationality,' M. Elizabeth Boone confirms her role as the leading interpreter of the complex interactions between the United States and Spain as revealed in the visual arts. This thoroughly researched analysis of key international expositions held between 1876 and 1915 demonstrates the nuances of these trans-Atlantic relations and provides insight into Hispanic/Latinx identity and presence in the United States over a century later. -Katherine Manthorne, editor of California Mexicana: Missions to Murals, 1820-1930 Pioneering in every respect, this handsomely-illustrated volume offers unique insights into the extent to which political circumstances, combined with long-standing racial and religious prejudices, frustrated Spain's campaign for recognition of the artistic and creative genius of its people at various world's fairs. The volume is a must for anyone interested in Spain's modern history along with those concerned with attitudes towards the place of both Spanish and Hispanic culture in the United States. -Richard L. Kagan, author of Urban Images of the Hispanic World, 1493-1793 A meticulously researched and engagingly written account of the genesis, the promotion, and also the avoidance of Spanish identity and culture, including in Spain's former colonies. This impressive book is a major contribution to transnational cultural studies, demonstrating Boone's deep and nuanced command of Spanish, Latin American, and U.S. art and culture. -Barbara Brinson Curiel, Humboldt State University The Spanish Element in Our Nationality mines a wealth of visual and textual evidence from the later 19th and early 20th century world's fairs in order to convincingly demonstrate Spain's marginalization in the construction of an American identity that leaned more heavily toward England. While well-versed in theoretical approaches to its subject and detailed in unraveling the complexities of Spain's reception at world's fairs, Boone's book remains grounded in a careful examination of the fine arts and material culture, and how the visual arts functioned politically in an international context. -David Raizman, coeditor of Expanding Nationalisms at World Fairs: Identity, Diversity and Exchange, 1851-1915 A wonderfully detailed investigation of the shaping of Spain's national-ethnic identity through several key international exhibitions with art in the United States and Latin America. Drawing upon unpublished archival sources, the engaging study analyzes the strategies of, and the international stakes for administrators, statespersons, and critics from different nations. This book offers readers an indispensable understanding of the politics of display in the creation and reception of these exhibitions. -Oscar E. Vazquez, author of The End Again: Degeneration and Visual Culture in Modern Spain This book is groundbreaking and an important tool in helping us all get a richer, more complete, and much more realistic view of the Spanish past and contributions to making the United States what it was to become. -David M. Sokol, Journal of American Culture This book offers the interested reader an excellent gateway to think visual cultures in dialogue with the objective of the nations at the time of the composition of collections that synthesized national imageries and, at the same time, to discover which elements were included and excluded in the consolidation of those canons. From my perspective, it is, in turn, a contribution to think the construction of national patrimony in a way that is more dynamic and attentive to quite different elements and actors. -Paula Bruno, Tapuya The Spanish Element in Our Nationality is a welcome contribution during an important historical moment, when the US relationship to its Hispanic heritage and present-day culture is being reconfigured. July 29, 2020, marked the establishment of the National Museum of the American Latino with the approval of the US Congress, as part of the omnibus spending bill. Drawing on the visual culture of the nineteenth-century World's Fairs, Boone's book puts in perspective the historical origins of the tension between the US and its Spanish roots. -Maria Dorofeeva, Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide


Author Information

M. Elizabeth Boone is Professor of the History of Art, Design and Visual Culture at the University of Alberta. She is the author of Vistas de España: American Views of Art and Life in Spain, 1860–1914.

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