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Imperial Histories from Alfonso X to Inca Garcilaso: Revisionist Myths of Reconquest and Conquest

Roberto González-Casanovas

 

Verlag Digitalia, 1997

ISBN 9781882528240 , 221 Seiten

Format PDF, OL

Kopierschutz DRM

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69,95 EUR


 

Contents

8

Preface

11

Chapter 1: Critical models of cultural historicism for Iberian history and historiography

12

1.1 Cultural textuality and cultural interpretation: History as context, intertext, and metatext

12

1.2 Cultural-historicist approaches to historiography: History as discourse, example, and critique

15

1.3 Cultural revisionism in historiography: From mythopoetics to ethical rhetoric

20

Chapter 2: National-imperial propaganda of the Castilian/Hispanic Reconquest

22

2.1 The Alfonsine historical discourse on Hispania

22

2.2 Fecho d'Espanna, fecho d'Imperio: cultural politics and poetics

23

2.3 Señorío as royal authority: History-making and history-writing

29

Chapter 3: Popular myths of the Reconquest in Alfonso X's prosified epic songs

32

3.1 Epic discourse in vernacular chronicles: Heroic historiography

32

3.2 National stories as historical-poetic canon: Gestas to estorias

34

3.3 Cantares de gestas as narrative example and historical authority

37

3.4 National heroes as historical exemplars: Count Fernan González

45

3.5 Epic texts and types as models for the Alfonsine chroniclers

51

Chapter 4: Chivalric and crusading revisionism in Iberian royal-aristocratic chronicles

54

4.1 Chivalric codes in Ibero-Christian frontier chronicles

54

4.1.1 Iberian transformation: history of reconquest as refoundation

54

4.1.2 Prologues: national historiography as courtly mythography

55

4.1.3 Christian restoration: story of reconquest as reconversion

66

4.2 Mirror of Christian chivalry: St. Fernando III as crusader-king

67

4.2.1 Reconquest deeds: past and present

67

4.2.2 Critical models: Alfonsine history of Iberian crusade

69

4.2.3 Historicist model: Alfonsine history on Fernando III

70

4.2.4 Reconquest heroes: champions and exemplars

73

Chapter 5: Heroic typology and historical authority in late-medieval Romance chronicles

75

5.1 National history and vernacular propaganda

75

5.2 Royal reformation in Alfonso X

76

5.3 Aristocratic adventure in Jaume I

77

5.4 Political hagiography in Joinville

79

5.5 Social prophecy in Compagni

80

5.6 Courtly chronicles and popular reception

82

Chapter 6: Discourse of changing eras in histories and stories from the Reconquest to the Conquest

85

6.1 Ages of expansion and discovery: Old and new frontiers

85

6.2 Historical interpretation of conquest as mission

87

6.3 New Iberian narratives about New Worlds

98

Chapter 7: Cultural-historical transition in Colón's rhetoric of quest and Utopia

100

7.1 The cultural rhetoric of discovery

100

7.2 Colón's medieval typology of the quest

101

7.3 Colón's Renaissance myth of Utopia

106

7.4 Cultural discourse as typology and mythology

111

Chapter 8: Authorial-editorial frames in reports of the Discovery and histories of the Conquest

113

8.1 Critical interpretations of historiographic authority: New and old orders for Iberia and America

113

8.1.1 Cultural models for colonial historical authority

113

8.1.2 Towards a critical model of colonial historicist semiotics

116

8.2 Humanist critique of (pre)history in Inca Garcilaso: Old and new empires in Peru and Spain

118

8.2.1 Humanist-historicist hermeneutics of Old and New Worlds

118

8.2.2 Historical authority, oral tradition, and textual revision

120

8.2.3 Iberian and indigenist reception in the Inca Garcilaso

126

Chapter 9: Conquest Utopias and dystopias as historical paradigm and parable: New World myth, Old World reception

129

9.1 Plato's vs. More's model: Historical rise/fall of empires

129

9.1.1 Utopian textuality in Iberian histories of Conquest

129

9.1.2 Utopian historiography as cultural mythography

130

9.2 New Spain and New World: Historic transformations

134

9.3 Golden Age, Promised Land: Propaganda and critique

145

Chapter 10: Revisionist histories and myths of the Iberian Reconquest and Conquest

148

10.1 Medieval-Renaissance Iberian historicism: Issues of authority, reception, revision

148

10.2 Ideology of Reconquest and Conquest: Discourses on civilization, mission, empire

149

10.3 Comparative models of historiography: Functions of narratives, myths, examples

153

10.4 Cultural-historicist models of Iberian expansion

156

Notes

158

Select Bibliography: Works Cited or Consulted

181

Abbreviations

181

Section 1: Editions of Texts

181

Section 2: Critical Studies

182

Appendix: Models, Texts, Chronology

204

Table 1: Romance chroniclers' authority [chapter 5]

204

Tables 2A+B: Heroic typology of Fernando III [chapter 4.2]

205

Tables 3A+B: Colón's rhetoric of quest and Utopia [chapter 7]

207

Tables 4A+B: Authorial frames in Conquest chronicles [chapter 8.1]

209

Table 5: Chronology of Reconquest and Conquest

211

Index

214

A

214

B

214

C

214

D

216

E

216

F

216

G

217

H

217

I

218

J

218

K

218

L

219

M

219

N

219

O

220

P

220

R

220

S

221

T

221

U

221

V

221

W

221

X

221

Z

221