Indios en escena: La representación del amerindio en el teatro del Siglo de Oro
Book summary:
Indios en escena engages both the Baroque and Colonial fields of Hispanism in order to reevaluate fourteen major plays of Spanish Golden Age literature from a social-historical perspective. Castillo argues that these plays portray Amerindians not in their “otherness” but as subjects of empire. It is the author’s contention that these dramas reveal the vast contradictions between the two leading ideological trends of the age as performed on the stage: the discourse of honor and the juridical-theological code, both of which attempt to assimilate the Amerindian phenomenon under the auspices of church and state. These works consistently raise the paradoxical question of how a person can be a savage and have honor at the same time. The Amerindian must become a new “subject” for the Spanish Crown (as stated by the discourse of honor in these plays), i.e., an honorable and distinguished Indian capable of lofty speech and courage in battle. Yet, Amerindians are also barbarians or wild “children” (F. de Vitoria, Las Casas) who need the redemptive intervention of the Church to mature (evolve) and to be capable of salvation. These plays reveal the effort to integrate and assimilate the new indigenous entities under the monarcho-seigneurial system while exposing the philosophical contradictions that Baroque ideology has to overcome in order to elicit obedience.
Publisher:
Purdue University Press
Praise:
Quote:
… a compelling view of both dramatic production and philosophical debates about indigenous people as a key intellectual milieu of the time. … transatlantic in approach and impact … The fact that Castillo never loses sight of this essential distinction [between representation of the indigenous people and representation of the Spanish Empire and its colonialist ideology] indicates the critical rigor and predicts the scholarly purchase Indios en escena will continue to have in the coming years.
Credit:
Jorge Coronado, Modern Language Notes (2011): 416-18.
Quote:
Este libro es uno de los estudios más equilibrados, mejor documentados y más iluminadores que, en mi opinión, se han publicado hasta la fecha sobre la representación del personaje indígena americano.
Credit:
José María Ruano de la Haza, Revista de Estudios Hispánicos 45.1 (Winter 2011): 227-29.
Quote:
An exhaustively researched study that fleshes out the fluctuating religiously and politically influenced image of the New World natives as well as that of Spaniards in the ‘conquest plays’ of Spanish Golden Age Theater.
Credit:
Bonnie Gasior, California State University, Long Beach (book cover)
Quote:
… el trabajo es muy sólido y erudito … Con la ventaja de no tener deudas políticas visibles, nuestro investigador supera a sus predecesores en finura interpretativa y en equilibrio ideológico, además de emplear un tono elegante y nada polémico.
Credit:
Héctor Brioso Santos, Criticón 111-12 (2011): 310-14.
Quote:
Este libro supera, en mi opinión, las ideas insuficientemente elaboradas de críticos como Tzvetan Todorov respecto al «otro» de la conquista en su La conquista de América, la cuestión del otro (1982). Esta nueva publicación de Moisés R. Castillo es justamente una lectura indispensable para quienes estudiamos el teatro del Siglo de Oro, así como para quienes valoramos la historia de América.
Credit:
A. Robert Lauer TEATRO-L Archives, (reseñas) Dec. 31, 2010, also in Bulletin of the Comediantes 68.2 (2016): 200.
Bio:
Short bio:
Moisés R. Castillo. Associate Professor of Early Modern and Colonial Studies in the Department of Hispanic Studies at the University of Kentucky. With a B.A. in Philosophy from the University of Granada, Spain, and a M.A. and Ph.D. in Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian literature from the University of Minnesota, he is the author of Indios en escena: La representación del amerindio en el teatro del Siglo de Oro, Purdue University Press, 2009; guest editor of the special number of Romance Quarterly vol. 61, no 2, 2014 devoted to Cervantes’s Exemplary Novels; numerous chapters in volumes, and articles in refereed journals. His research focuses on Golden Age theater and Cervantes studies. Currently, he is writing a manuscript on the Cervantine comedias. He is the recipient of the College of Arts & Sciences Outstanding Teaching Award in the Humanities 2015-2016, at the University of Kentucky.
A&S department affiliation:
Book URL:
https://www.cla.purdue.edu/slc/psrl/authors/castillo._moises.html