Description
Book SynopsisIrigoyen-Garcia provides incisive new ideas about the social and ethnocentric uses of the genre, as well as its interrelation with ideas of race, animal husbandry, and nation building in early modern Spain.
Trade Review'What makes this a great academic achievement is that it plays a big part in finding a meaningful global interpretation of the heterogeneous pastoral manifestation in early modern Spain.' -- Oiol Miro Marti Renaissance Quarterly vol 67:04:2014
Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: A country of Shepherds * Race, Religion, and Culture in Early Modern Spain * The Figure of the Shepherd in Early Modern Spain * Pastoral Literature and Cultural Supersession Part One. Sheep Herding and Ethnocentrism in Early Modern Spain * 1 Sheep Herding and Discourses on Race * Writing the History of Spanish Sheep * Sheep Herding and Racial Terminology * The Good Shepherd and limpieza de sangre * Representing Laban's Livestock * 2 Rustic Culture and the Invention of the Spanish People * The Adoration of the shepherds * Apparitions to Shepherds * Performing Rustic Culture * Dressing the Shepherd * Rustic Speech as Relic * 3 In the Land of Pan: Pastoral Classicism and Historiography * Ancient Place Names and Pastoral Cartographies * Inhabiting the Past with Shepherds * Etymology and Sheep Herding * Paganism and Ethnic Identity * The God Pan and the Name of Spain Part Two. Contesting Ethnocentrism within the Arcadia * 4 The Moor in Arcadia * The Story of El Abencerraje in Montemayor's La Diana * Reluctant Shepherds: Gaspar Mercader's El prado de Valencia * The Limits of Cultural Cleansing in Cervantes' pastoral * 5 Imagining the Spanish Arcadia after 1609 * Jews and Gypsies in Lope de Vega's Pastores de Belen * Nostalgia for the Moor: Jacinto Espinel Adorno's El premio de la constancia * Pastoral Hierarchies: Juan de Barrionuevo y Moya's Primera parte de la soledad entretenida * Conclusion: Pan's Labyrinth * The Pastoral Habitus: Early Modern to Present * From Blood Purity to Whiteness * Pastoral and Ethnocentrism: Future Directions Notes Works Cited