<p>“Zanardi convincingly shows that majismo’s ability to reflect the past as well as implicate the modern, and the way that it highlights the demonstrated importance of fashion and appearances in constructing national character, is of continued relevance today.”</p><p>—Mey-Yen Moriuchi <i>caa.reviews</i></p>
<p>“Zanardi's study of <i>majismo</i>, a cultural phenomenon of later eighteenth-century Spain, is a welcome contribution to the literature in English. . . . The author reads the Spanish elite's embracing of majo culture through social performance and artistic patronage as a means of recuperating Spanish heritage and claiming native authenticity. Zanardi is rigorous in analyzing the ways in which visual art participated in and complicated this construction of national character. Through probing examination and theorizing of the clothing, class, body, and gender depicted in paintings, prints, and sculptures by Spanish and non-Spanish artists, the author challenges the unsteady binaries in majo representation—native and foreign, royalty and commoner, masculine and feminine, traditional and modern. Recommended.”</p><p>—A. Luxenberg <i>Choice</i></p>
<p>“Through a thorough and cogent analysis of multiple images of <i>majas</i> and <i>majos</i> by canonical artists from Goya to Picasso, in fashion catalogs, <i>costumbrista</i> illustrations, and tapestry cartoons, Tara Zanardi traces the cultural phenomenon of <i>majismo</i> among eighteenth-century Spanish elites, which came to be associated with ‘true’ Spanish identity into the twentieth century. Despite attempts to connect to Spanish tradition, majismo ultimately projected ambiguous national, gender, and class identities that can still be seen in Spain today.”</p><p>—Elizabeth Franklin Lewis, University of Mary Washington</p>
<p>“What does it mean to be Spanish? And how did Spain come to differentiate itself from the rest of the world? These are questions that Tara Zanardi addresses in this insightful, perceptive study of <i>majismo</i>, the eighteenth-century movement to define uniquely Spanish cultural prototypes drawn from the urban lower classes of Madrid. Majismo codified costumes, behaviors, and practices now considered quintessentially Spanish, among them bullfighting and the wearing of the mantilla. Zanardi reveals the <i>maja</i> and <i>majo</i> to be ambiguous cultural figures, since in them were combined tradition and modernity, earthiness and elegance, chivalry and sass. Through detailed analysis of eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century imagery, including prints and paintings by Francisco Goya, Zanardi’s important book delves into the foundational myths of Spanishness itself.”</p><p>—Michael Yonan, University of Missouri</p>
<p>“Tara Zanardi’s <i>Framing Majismo </i>addresses ambitious questions about the role played by art in the formation of Spanish identity for the Bourbon monarchy during the Enlightenment and in the aftermath of the French Revolution. It is a work of admirable erudition and complexity, bringing together a broad range of sources—primary and secondary, historical and theoretical. A model of interdisciplinary research, Zanardi’s book has implications for eighteenth-century studies more generally—for people interested in monarchy, questions of identity, gender studies—and will generate a great deal of additional discussion and research, always the sign of a truly important publication. It stands as a defining study for art history of the period.”</p><p>—Melissa Hyde, University of Florida</p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Tara Zanardi is Assistant Professor of Art History at Hunter College.