Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Prologue
- Introduction: Armored Beasts and the Elephant in the Room
- 1 Hawa’i the Elephant and Abada the Rhinoceros
- 2 Fuleco the Armadillo
- 3 Jarama the Bull and Maghreb the Lion
- Conclusion: Biogeography as a Teaching Tool
- Appendix 1 Biogeography Course Project: Naming an Early Modern Animal
- Appendix 2 Bibliography for the Study of Animals and Early Modern Spain
- Index
Appendix 2 - Bibliography for the Study of Animals and Early Modern Spain
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 November 2020
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Prologue
- Introduction: Armored Beasts and the Elephant in the Room
- 1 Hawa’i the Elephant and Abada the Rhinoceros
- 2 Fuleco the Armadillo
- 3 Jarama the Bull and Maghreb the Lion
- Conclusion: Biogeography as a Teaching Tool
- Appendix 1 Biogeography Course Project: Naming an Early Modern Animal
- Appendix 2 Bibliography for the Study of Animals and Early Modern Spain
- Index
Summary
Primary text
Pellicer de Ossau y Tovar, José. 1632. Anfiteatro de Felipe el Grande. Madrid: Juan González.
Secondary texts
Alves, Abel. 2011. Animals of Spain: An Introduction to Imperial Perceptions and Human Interaction with Other Animals, 1492-1826. Leiden: Brill.
——. 2020. “Domestication and Coevolution.” The Handbook of Historical Animal Studies. Eds. Brett Mizelle, Mieke Roscher, and André Krebber. Oldenbourg: De Gruyter. Beusterien, John. 2012. Canines in Cervantes and Velázquez: An Animal Studies Reading of Early Modern Spain. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing.
——. 2016. “Humor and a Political Future through Illustrations of Sancho Panza and His Donkey.” Baroque Projections: Images and Texts in Dialogue with the Early Modern Hispanic World. Eds. Michael J. Horswell and Frédéric Conrod. Newark: Juan de la Cuesta. 191–208.
——. 2019. “Comedy and Environmental Cultural Studies: An Image of a Spanish Rhinoceros and Sancho with his Donkey.” Environmental Cultural Studies Through Time: The Luso-Hispanic World. Eds. Kata Beilin, Kathleen Connolly, and Micah McKay. Hispanic Issues Online: University of Minnesota. 254–71.
——. 2020. “Madrigal in Miguel de Cervantes's La gran sultana: An Animal Studies Approach.” Romance Notes, forthcoming.
Brandner, Zachary. 2020. “El oso pardo en la obra de Góngora y Cervantes: Crisis ecológica de la masculinidad.” Romance Notes, forthcoming.
Dopico Black, Georgina. 2010. “The Ban and the Bull: Cultural Studies, Animal Studies, and Spain.” Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies 11.3–4: 235–49.
Gómez Centurión, Carlos. 2011. Alhajas para soberanos. Los animales reales en el siglo XVIII: de las leoneras a las mascotas de cámara. Valladolid: Junta de Castilla y León.
Larsen, Kevin. 1984. “Observations on the Animals and Animal Imagery in Cervantes’ Theater.” Modern Language Studies 14.4: 64–75.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Transoceanic Animals as Spectacle in Early Modern Spain , pp. 239 - 240Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2020