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Velázquez, Painter & Curator
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 299

Velázquez, Painter & Curator

  • Categories: Art
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2024-11-04
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  • Publisher: BRILL

This book is the first to address the curatorial career of Diego Velázquez, painter to King Philip IV of Spain and chamberlain of his royal palace. It investigates the role that Velázquez played in overseeing the display of the Habsburg art collection, then the richest in the western world, and the role, in turn, that this practice played in his creative trajectory between his arrival at the Spanish court in 1623 and his death in 1660. This book thus recasts Velázquez’s career as an episode in the history of the curator.

La Fiesta en el mundo hispánico
  • Language: es
  • Pages: 444

La Fiesta en el mundo hispánico

Las mil caras del homo ludens... Ellas han jalonado de sueños, inquietudes, imaginaciones, y a veces de perversiones, la oficialidad del poder, del sistema, de lo social. La fiesta ha sido y es el patrimonio exclusivo del ser humano, racional y pasional a partes iguales, por eso la fiesta ha sido y es evasión, escape, memoria. Como patrimonio del quehacer colectivo, el marco lúdico y festivo nos permite rastrear las huellas de nuestro pasado no siempre en su versión oficial porque, indudablemente, bajo el ropaje reglado e institucionalizado, late la espontaneidad de la subversión. Nos permite, en fin, reconstruir los parámetros de nuestra cultura, de sus ejes y tensiones, y evocarla, o interpretarla, en las muchas disciplinas que conjuga. En parte ese es el propósito de este volumen. En sus páginas hemos querido recoger algunas de las mil caras del homo ludens y tomar el pulso a muchos de aquellos dislates, reales e imaginarios, que alimentaron la fiesta, que fueron y son la fiesta, desde sus orígenes a su más inmediato presente.

Death and Gender in the Early Modern Period
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 242

Death and Gender in the Early Modern Period

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2024-03-18
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  • Publisher: BRILL

In premodern Europe, the gender identity of those waiting for Doomsday in their tombs could be reaffirmed, readjusted, or even neutralized. Testimonies of this renegotiation of gender at the encounter with death is detectable in wills, letters envisioning oneself as dead, literary narratives, provisions for burial and memorialization, the laws for the disposal of those executed for heinous crimes and the treatment of human remains as relics.

The Mughal Padshah
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 193

The Mughal Padshah

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015-11-16
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  • Publisher: BRILL

In The Mughal Padshah Jorge Flores offers both a lucid English translation and the Portuguese original of a previously unknown account of the Mughal Emperor Jahangir (r. 1605-1627). Probably penned by the Jesuit priest Jerónimo Xavier in 1610-11, the Treatise of the Court and Household of Jahangir Padshah King of the Mughals reads quite differently than the usual missionary report. Surviving in four different versions, this text reveals intriguing insights on Jahangir and his family, the Mughal court and its political rituals, as well as the imperial elite and its military and economic strength. A comprehensive introduction situates the Treatise in the ‘disputed’ landscape of European accounts on Mughal India, as well as illuminates the actual conditions of production and readership of such a text between South Asia and the Iberian Peninsula.

A Network of Converso Families in Early Modern Toledo
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 488

A Network of Converso Families in Early Modern Toledo

The lives of Toledan Jewish families are traced from the time of the Inquisition through seventeenth-century Spain

The Martyrs of Japan
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 322

The Martyrs of Japan

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2021-06-22
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  • Publisher: BRILL

In The Martyrs of Japan, Rady Roldán-Figueroa examines the role that Catholic missionary orders played in the dissemination of accounts of Christian martyrdom in Japan. The work combines several historiographical approaches, including publication history, history of missions, and “new” institutional history. The author offers an overarching portrayal of the writing, printing, and circulation of books of ‘Japano-martyrology.’ The book is organized into two parts. The first part, “Spirituality of Writing, Publication History, and Japano-martyrology,” addresses topics ranging from the historical background of Christianity in Japan to the publishers of Japano-martyrology. The second part, “Jesuits, Discalced Franciscans, and the Production of Japano-martyrology in the Early Modern Spanish World,” features closer analysis of selected works of Japano-martyrology by Jesuit and Discalced Franciscan writers.

Specialist Markets in the Early Modern Book World
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 434

Specialist Markets in the Early Modern Book World

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015-05-19
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  • Publisher: BRILL

Specialist Markets in the Early Modern Book World, edited by Richard Kirwan and Sophie Mullins, investigates an underexplored yet important facet of early modern book production. Bringing together 19 detailed case studies, this volume considers and reconstructs the characteristics of specialist book production in the early modern period. In particular it explores the motives that led to specialisation ranging from the desire for profit on the part of risk-taking, entrepreneurial individuals or family firms to the more propagandist or missionising aims of corporate groups who subsidised production, often without regard for profit. The book also explores the economic and personal pressures and perils that accompanied specialist production, which was often a risk-laden enterprise that could end in financial and social ruin.

Anatomy and Anatomists in Early Modern Spain
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 298

Anatomy and Anatomists in Early Modern Spain

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016-03-09
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Taking the Vesalian anatomical revolution as its point of departure, this volume charts the apparent rise and fall of anatomy studies within universities in sixteenth-century Spain, focussing particularly on primary sources from 1550 to 1600. In doing so, it both clarifies the Spanish contribution to the field of anatomy and disentangles the distorted political and historiographical viewpoints emerging from previous research. Studies of early modern Iberian science have only been carried out coherently and collaboratively in the last few decades, even though fierce debates on the subject have dominated Spanish historiography for more than two centuries. In the field of anatomy studies, many uninformed and biased readings of archival sources have resulted in a very confused picture of the practice of dissection and the teaching of anatomy in the Iberian Peninsula, in which the highly complex conditions of anatomical research within Spain’s national context are often oversimplified. The new empirical evidence that this book brings to light suggests a far more multifaceted narrative of Iberian Renaissance anatomy than has been presented to date.

El Greco
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 201

El Greco

  • Categories: Art

A visually stunning examination of El Greco’s work that considers the artist’s constant reinvention and professional drive Renowned for a singular artistic vision, Domenikos Theotokopoulos, known as El Greco (1541–1614), developed his distinctive painting style as he assiduously pursued professional success. This fresh and engaging survey of El Greco’s work explores varied aspects of the artist’s career—his aesthetic education in Italy, the mixed reception of his mature works in Spain, his uncompromising approach to business, and the baroque logistics of his Toledo workshop—and reveals the depth of El Greco’s astounding ambition. The impressive volume focuses in particular on...

Queen, Mother, and Stateswoman
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 313

Queen, Mother, and Stateswoman

When Philip IV of Spain died in 1665, his heir, Carlos II, was three years old. In addition to this looming dynastic crisis, decades of enormous military commitments had left Spain a virtually bankrupt state with vulnerable frontiers and a depleted army. In Silvia Z. Mitchell’s revisionist account, Queen, Mother, and Stateswoman, Queen Regent Mariana of Austria emerges as a towering figure at court and on the international stage, while her key collaborators—the secretaries, ministers, and diplomats who have previously been ignored or undervalued—take their rightful place in history. Mitchell provides a nuanced account of Mariana of Austria’s ten-year regency (1665–75) of the global...