Making Difference in Medieval and Early Modern IberiaUniversity of Notre Dame Press, 2005 - 218 pages In this engaging study Jean Dangler examines the way that ideas of difference were forged in four types of medieval Iberian discourse: muwashshah/jarcha poems from al-Andalus, Andalusi "cutting poems," medical literature about the body, and portrayals of the monster. According to Dangler, these texts demonstrate the two fundamental precepts of medieval Iberian alterity: multifaceted subject formation and the embrace of contrasts and the negative. Medieval Iberia was a multicultural territory of Muslim, Jewish, and Christian societies. These communities had constant geographic, cultural, political, and economic contact with one another. Because medieval Iberia was not hierarchical and homogenous, medieval subjectivity was not always marked by essential qualities of character, but was mutable and shifting. The adverse was often esteemed in the making of meaning and the forging of the social order. Dangler explores how the four discourses she analyzes changed in the early modern period, from an acceptance of difference to more rigid concepts of subjectivity and the marginalization of difference. This shift accompanied the rise of the Castilian nation-state and its imposition of static hierarchies of value. This book will appeal to a broad range of medievalists. It makes an important contribution to the growing interest in medieval Iberia and offers a nuanced understanding of medieval history and culture in general. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 43
... fifteenth cen- tury.109 According to José Antonio Maravall , the administrative nobility of the late fifteenth century complied with the tenets of the Catholic Kings : Todo el país , entendiendo entonces por tal los grupos minoritarios ...
... fifteenth - century invention of the printing press . Unlike the oral per- formance of the muwashshah and zajal in Andalusi courts , many of the cancionero verses were destined for written transmission . Keith Whinnom and Jane Whetnall ...
... fifteenth - century Lilio de medicina ( Iris of medicine ) was published as a manual for inexperienced practitioners to find diagnoses and cures for common illnesses.30 Much of this medical literature in the vernacular was in- tended as ...