Format:
1 Online-Ressource (362 p)
Edition:
[Online-Ausgabe]
ISBN:
9789048541935
Series Statement:
Heritage and Memory Studies 10
Content:
Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- List of Figures -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: On Hispanophobia and Hispanophilia across Time and Space -- PART I. Early Modern Discourses on Spain -- 1. Being Spanish in the Early Modern World -- 2. Spanish Exemplary Rulership? Antonio de Guevara's Relox de Príncipes (1529) in English (1557) and Dutch (1578) Translation -- 3. Between Love and Hate : Thomas Scott's Puritan Propaganda and His Interest in Spanish Culture -- 4. Enemy Treasures : The Making and Marketing of Spanish Comedia in the Amsterdam Schouwburg -- 5. 'The Barke Is Bad, but the Tree Good' : Hispanophilia, Hispanophobia and Spanish Honour in English and Dutch Plays (c. 1630-1670) -- 6. James Salgado: Anti-Spanish Sentiment and the Popish Plot -- PART II. Modern Discourses on Spain -- 7. From Hispanophobia to Quixotephilia : The Politics of Quixotism in the British Long Eighteenth Century -- 8. Spanish Politicking in British Periodical Reviews, 1808-1814 -- 9. Hispanophobia and Hispanophilia in the Netherlands : Continuities and Ruptures in the Nineteenth Century -- 10. From Azoteas to Dungeons : Spain as Archaeology of the Despotism in Alexander Dallas's Novel Vargas (1822) -- 11. Discordant Visions: Spain and the Stages of London in 1823 -- 12. Historical Fiction, Cultural Transfer and the Recycling of the Black Legend between the Low Countries and Britain: A Nineteenth-Century Case Study -- 13. 'Covering the Skeletons with Flesh and Blood' : Spanish Golden Age Drama in English and Dutch Nineteenth- Century Literary Histories -- Index
Content:
Spain has been a fruitful locus for the European imagination for centuries, and it has been most often perceived in black-and-white oppositions -- either as a tyrannical and fanatical force in the early modern period or as an imaginary geography of a 'Romantic' Spain in later centuries. However, the image of Spain, its culture and its inhabitants did not evolve inexorably from negative to positive. From the early modern period onwards, it responded to an ambiguous matrix of conflicting Hispanophobic and Hispanophilic representations. Just as in the nineteenth century latent negative stereotypes continued to resurface, even in the Romantic heyday, in the early modern period appreciation for Spain was equally undeniable. When Spain was a political and military superpower, it also enjoyed cultural hegemony with a literary Golden Age producing internationally hailed masterpieces. Literary Hispanophobia and Hispanophilia in Britain and the Low Countries (1550-1850) explores the protracted interest in Spain and its culture, and it exposes the co-existent ambiguity between scorn and fascination that characterizes Western historical perceptions, in particular in Britain and the Low Countries, two geographical spaces with a shared sense of historical connectedness and an overlapping, sometimes complicated, history with Spain
Note:
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
,
In English
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1515/9789048541935
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