Civilizing the Pre-Modern Spanish World through the Gaze of Modernity

Abstract: The gaze of history when it is penned by Western scholars is often undergirded by a layer of violence through which the historian imposes his own view and perceptions upon another people and their places. During the early modern period (1492-1800), Europeans sought to describe the peoples and places they had encountered for European audiences, which gave rise to increased interest in the science of describing people (and then to the fields of anthropology and ethnography), and the invention of race. This article meditates on how the gaze imposes race while also structuring non-white people within the Enlightenment concepts of civilization and culture. Using casta paintings as well as literature drawn from the Spanish literary canon, we furthermore demonstrate how race became inscribed as a civilizing tool wielded in the nineteenth century by other Europeans against Spain as a means of othering and de-occidentalizing it from without the so-called civilized world.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Beck,Lauren
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: International Institute for Philosophy and Social Studies 2019
Online Access:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0719-36962019000100101
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spelling oai:scielo:S0719-369620190001001012019-10-28Civilizing the Pre-Modern Spanish World through the Gaze of ModernityBeck,Lauren Race Gaze Visual Culture Literature Spain. Abstract: The gaze of history when it is penned by Western scholars is often undergirded by a layer of violence through which the historian imposes his own view and perceptions upon another people and their places. During the early modern period (1492-1800), Europeans sought to describe the peoples and places they had encountered for European audiences, which gave rise to increased interest in the science of describing people (and then to the fields of anthropology and ethnography), and the invention of race. This article meditates on how the gaze imposes race while also structuring non-white people within the Enlightenment concepts of civilization and culture. Using casta paintings as well as literature drawn from the Spanish literary canon, we furthermore demonstrate how race became inscribed as a civilizing tool wielded in the nineteenth century by other Europeans against Spain as a means of othering and de-occidentalizing it from without the so-called civilized world.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInternational Institute for Philosophy and Social StudiesPléyade (Santiago) n.23 20192019-06-01text/htmlhttp://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0719-36962019000100101en10.4067/S0719-36962019000100101
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country Chile
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language English
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author Beck,Lauren
spellingShingle Beck,Lauren
Civilizing the Pre-Modern Spanish World through the Gaze of Modernity
author_facet Beck,Lauren
author_sort Beck,Lauren
title Civilizing the Pre-Modern Spanish World through the Gaze of Modernity
title_short Civilizing the Pre-Modern Spanish World through the Gaze of Modernity
title_full Civilizing the Pre-Modern Spanish World through the Gaze of Modernity
title_fullStr Civilizing the Pre-Modern Spanish World through the Gaze of Modernity
title_full_unstemmed Civilizing the Pre-Modern Spanish World through the Gaze of Modernity
title_sort civilizing the pre-modern spanish world through the gaze of modernity
description Abstract: The gaze of history when it is penned by Western scholars is often undergirded by a layer of violence through which the historian imposes his own view and perceptions upon another people and their places. During the early modern period (1492-1800), Europeans sought to describe the peoples and places they had encountered for European audiences, which gave rise to increased interest in the science of describing people (and then to the fields of anthropology and ethnography), and the invention of race. This article meditates on how the gaze imposes race while also structuring non-white people within the Enlightenment concepts of civilization and culture. Using casta paintings as well as literature drawn from the Spanish literary canon, we furthermore demonstrate how race became inscribed as a civilizing tool wielded in the nineteenth century by other Europeans against Spain as a means of othering and de-occidentalizing it from without the so-called civilized world.
publisher International Institute for Philosophy and Social Studies
publishDate 2019
url http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0719-36962019000100101
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