1st Edition

Masculine Virtue in Early Modern Spain

By Shifra Armon Copyright 2015
    156 Pages
    by Routledge

    156 Pages
    by Routledge

    Masculine Virtue in Early Modern Spain extricates the history of masculinity in early modern Spain from the narrative of Spain’s fall from imperial power after 1640. This book culls genres as diverse as emblem books, poetry, drama, courtesy treatises and prose fiction, to restore the inception of courtiership at the Spanish Hapsburg court to the history of masculinity. Refuting the current conception that Spain’s political decline precipitated a ’crisis of masculinity’, Masculine Virtue maps changes in figurations of normative masculine conduct from 1500 to 1700. As Spain assumed the role of Europe’s first modern centralized empire, codes of masculine conduct changed to meet the demands of global rule. Viewed chronologically, Shifra Armon shows Spanish conduct literature to reveal three axes of transformation. The ideal subject (gendered male in both practice and law) became progressively more adaptable to changing circumstances, more intensely involved in currying his own public image, and more desirous of achieving renown. By bringing recent advances in gender theory to bear on normative rather than non-normative masculinities of early modern Spain, Armon is able to foreground the emergence of energizing new models of masculine virtue that continue to resonate today.

    Masculine Virtue in Early Modern Spain

    Biography

    Shifra Armon is Associate Professor of Spanish literatures and culture at the University of Florida, USA.

    "Armon's book is engaging and highly readable, and offers a new understanding of how early modern Spanish coutiers understood their position and their role at court." - Carolyn Salomons, St Mary's University, Calgary, Canada.

    "Masculine Virtue in Early Modern Spain bears eloquent, and refreshingly well copy-edited, testament to the mission statement for Ashgate’s New Hispanisms: Literary and Cultural Studies series to provide a home for ‘innovative studies that seek to understand how the cultural production of the Hispanic world is generated, disseminated and consumed’." - Duncan Wheeler, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK