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Speaking of Spain

The Evolution of Race and Nation in the Hispanic World
  • Antonio Feros
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2017
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About this book

Momentous changes swept Spain in the fifteenth century: royal marriage united its two largest kingdoms, the last Muslim emirate fell to Catholic armies, and conquests in the Americas were turning Spain into a great empire. Yet few people could define “Spanishness” concretely. Antonio Feros traces Spain’s evolving ideas of nationhood and ethnicity.

Reviews

Speaking of Spain is a majestic book. It illuminates the deep history of how Spaniards argued about national identity in an interconnected, imperial world. To speak about Spain meant speaking about Others. For Antonio Feros, there was no imagined nation without imagined outsiders. Beautifully crafted, Speaking of Spain is a book about a different time for our times.
-- Jeremy Adelman, Princeton University

This is a brilliantly illuminating, wide-ranging historical analysis of what has become the most pressing concern facing modern Europe: ‘national identity.’ Antonio Feros has written a gripping and authoritative account of how ‘Spain’ was created out of a conglomerate of different polities with different legal traditions, loyalties, and languages. He has also demonstrated, as no previous historian has, just how closely the process of nation-building was tied to empire, and how central that process was to the ever-present, but frequently ignored or neglected, question of race.
-- Anthony Pagden, University of California, Los Angeles

Drawing on dozens of legal, political, and/or philosophical treatises, mostly from the 16th and 17th centuries, as well as a treasure trove of current secondary sources, Feros demonstrates that the creation of Spain—indeed, the very concept of being Spanish—emerged out of debates by elite intellectuals played out over 300 years prior to the 1812 Cádiz Constitution, which publicly affirmed that all people born in Spanish-controlled territories were Spaniards, regardless of their place of birth or the color of their skin. Given the presence of others within Spain such as Jews, Muslims, and conversos, as well as others without—Indians, blacks, slaves, and, later, Creole elites in the Spanish empire—Feros convincingly argues that these discussions also included evolving discourses on race that escalated in the 18th century when scientific racism discussions in other European nations folded into Spanish ruminations on race. Valuable for its elegant writing, painstakingly thorough research, and Feros’s ability to convey very complicated arguments in his primary sources in clear, accessible English, this intellectual history is a seminal work.
-- E. A. Sanabria Choice


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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
April 3, 2017
eBook ISBN:
9780674979345
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
384
Other:
5 maps
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