Based on years of archival research in Madrid and Barcelona, this interdisciplinary study offers a fresh approach to understanding how men visualized themselves and their place in a nation that struggled to modernize after nearly a century of civil war, colonial entanglement, and imperial loss. Masculine Figures is the first study to provide a comprehensive overview of competing models of masculinity in nineteenth-century Spain, and is particularly novel in its treatment of Catalan texts and previously unstudied evidence (e.g., department store catalogs, commercial advertisements, fashion plates, and men's tailoring journals).
Fictional masculinity performs a symbolic role in representing and negotiating the contradictions male novelists often encountered in their attempts to professionalize not only as writers, but also as businessmen, professors, lawyers, and politicians. Through specific and recurring figures like the student, the priest, the businessman, and the heir, male novelists represent an increasingly middle-class world at odds with the values and virtues it inherited from an imperial Spanish past, and those it imported from more industrialized nations like England and France. The visual culture of the time and place marks the material turn in middle-class masculinity and sets the stage for discussions of race and sexuality.
Significant chapter sections on the used clothing trade (in the Rastro flea market in Madrid, also called "Las AmEricas" during the nineteenth century) and the "indiano businessman" (the colonial returnee) discuss the racial implications of fashion of the period-in the first example, through the racialized discourse of contagion that hygienists used to frame the market. In the second example, the book discusses the ways the Catalan indiano "accessorizes" himself with racialized commodities like pocket watches and tobacco and objectified/infantilized figures like Black house servants and footmen.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
This book is an excellent piece of scholarship. It is thoroughly researched, nicely organized, and in line with current scholarly trends. Moreover it is highly readable. Significantly, this project represents the most in-depth look at fashion and Spanish masculinities to date."-Collin McKinney, author of Mapping the Social Body: Urbanisation, the Gaze and the Novels of GaldOs
"The project is very well researched, and the arguments are well contextualized. Challenging conventional ways of thinking of the relation between nineteenth-century bourgeois masculinities and the consumer culture, the book is a valuable contribution to nineteenth-century Spanish literature and gender studies."-Dorota Heneghan, author of Striking Their Modern Pose: Fashion, Gender, and Modernity in GaldOs, Pardo BazAn, and PicOn
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 235 mm
Breite: 157 mm
Dicke: 23 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-8265-0518-7 (9780826505187)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Nicholas Wolters is an assistant professor of Spanish at Wake Forest University.
Introduction
1. The Student
2. The Priest
3. The Businessman
4. The Heir
Coda
Notes
Bibliography
Index