'Black but Human': Slavery and Visual Art in Hapsburg Spain, 1480-1700
Autor Carmen Fracchiaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 feb 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198881063
ISBN-10: 0198881061
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 63 colour, 27 b/w, plus 16pp colour plate section
Dimensiuni: 156 x 239 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198881061
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 63 colour, 27 b/w, plus 16pp colour plate section
Dimensiuni: 156 x 239 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
The visual and textual evidence that it assembles will be of substantial interest to those who study the history of race and colour in visual culture, and its original framing opens the way to those who will wish to take its arguments further.
Fracchia's groundbreaking book, rich in untapped archival sources, lays a foundation for a new understanding of racial blackness and its representation in the Iberian-Atlantic world. Fracchia integrates diasporic African cultural production and its reception with unprecedented depth and clarity — essential reading for anyone interested in race, aesthetics, art history, cultural studies, Atlantic history, and black studies.
Fracchia gives the voice and the views of the enslaved unlike any book on art from the period I have read, specifically she builds on the conventional academic scholarship of Victor Stoicha's chapter in Image of the Black in Western Art, she gives expression and humanity to the black enslaved, as well as consistently recognising slavery as a crime against humanity — sympathetically considering the enslaved and ex-enslaved Afro-Hispanics. I whole heartedly recommended this book, unreservedly.
A wonderful, scholarly, imaginative and necessary work [...] It profoundly develops our understanding of the semiotic construction of the black body [...] The work on the miracle of the black leg is extraordinary. [...] It has finally done justice to Velazquez, Juan de Pareja [...] This book has made available a hitherto neglected mini archive within the study of the visual cultures generated by Atlantic slavery.
'Black but Human' will be a key reference for scholars and students alike, pointing the way toward future studies on the central place of African and Afro-descendant women and men in shaping the visual and material cultures of early modern Iberia.
On the whole, this book is an invaluable point of departure for students and scholars interested in a history of early modern Spanish art that reinserts the slave trade as a central factor in Habsburg Spanish economic, artistic, and religious development. One of the most successful aspects of 'Black but Human' is the way Fracchia implicitly asserts that representations of slavery are not a secondary, parallel, or subsection of the history of Habsburg Spanish visual culture, but are importantly embedded within and central to the arc of that history.
The strength of this book lies in its tour-de-force discussion of visual representations of Black Africans in Hapsburg Spain, culminating in a rich catalogue of fifty-eight images.
Black but Human is a welcome addition to the growing discussion on the prominent role of Afro-Iberians in early modern society and the Black intellectual history of the Atlantic.
Fracchia's groundbreaking book, rich in untapped archival sources, lays a foundation for a new understanding of racial blackness and its representation in the Iberian-Atlantic world. Fracchia integrates diasporic African cultural production and its reception with unprecedented depth and clarity — essential reading for anyone interested in race, aesthetics, art history, cultural studies, Atlantic history, and black studies.
Fracchia gives the voice and the views of the enslaved unlike any book on art from the period I have read, specifically she builds on the conventional academic scholarship of Victor Stoicha's chapter in Image of the Black in Western Art, she gives expression and humanity to the black enslaved, as well as consistently recognising slavery as a crime against humanity — sympathetically considering the enslaved and ex-enslaved Afro-Hispanics. I whole heartedly recommended this book, unreservedly.
A wonderful, scholarly, imaginative and necessary work [...] It profoundly develops our understanding of the semiotic construction of the black body [...] The work on the miracle of the black leg is extraordinary. [...] It has finally done justice to Velazquez, Juan de Pareja [...] This book has made available a hitherto neglected mini archive within the study of the visual cultures generated by Atlantic slavery.
'Black but Human' will be a key reference for scholars and students alike, pointing the way toward future studies on the central place of African and Afro-descendant women and men in shaping the visual and material cultures of early modern Iberia.
On the whole, this book is an invaluable point of departure for students and scholars interested in a history of early modern Spanish art that reinserts the slave trade as a central factor in Habsburg Spanish economic, artistic, and religious development. One of the most successful aspects of 'Black but Human' is the way Fracchia implicitly asserts that representations of slavery are not a secondary, parallel, or subsection of the history of Habsburg Spanish visual culture, but are importantly embedded within and central to the arc of that history.
The strength of this book lies in its tour-de-force discussion of visual representations of Black Africans in Hapsburg Spain, culminating in a rich catalogue of fifty-eight images.
Black but Human is a welcome addition to the growing discussion on the prominent role of Afro-Iberians in early modern society and the Black intellectual history of the Atlantic.
Notă biografică
Carmen Fracchia is Professor of Hispanic Art History at Birkbeck, University of London. Her work focusses on Hispanic intellectual, political, and religious thought about local Spanish and transatlantic slavery, freedom, subjectivity, and hybridity and their articulations in the visual form during the Hapsburg dynasty.