Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Introduction: Iberian Modalities: The Logic of an Intercultural Field
- Part I Institutionalizing Iberian Studies: A Change of Paradigm
- Part II Theorizing Iberia
- Part III Iberian Dialogs
- 8 Asymmetry and the Political: Paradigms for a Cultural History of the Iberian Twentieth Century
- 9 Sins of the Flesh: Bullfighting as a Model of Power
- 10 Jews and Jewishness in Carme Riera's Dins el darrer blau
- 11 Mediterranean Exemplarities: The Case of Medieval Iberia
- Part IV From Sea to Iberian Sea
- Works Cited
- Index
9 - Sins of the Flesh: Bullfighting as a Model of Power
from Part III - Iberian Dialogs
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Introduction: Iberian Modalities: The Logic of an Intercultural Field
- Part I Institutionalizing Iberian Studies: A Change of Paradigm
- Part II Theorizing Iberia
- Part III Iberian Dialogs
- 8 Asymmetry and the Political: Paradigms for a Cultural History of the Iberian Twentieth Century
- 9 Sins of the Flesh: Bullfighting as a Model of Power
- 10 Jews and Jewishness in Carme Riera's Dins el darrer blau
- 11 Mediterranean Exemplarities: The Case of Medieval Iberia
- Part IV From Sea to Iberian Sea
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
Durs càstigs eren conservats en símbols vells.
– Salvador Espriu, Setmana SantaThe ancient Roman geographer Strabo is best known, within Iberian studies, as being the source of the infamous comparison of Hispania to a bull's hide. As with most quotations taken out of context, Strabo's original source bears more complexity than is revealed by common discourse. Using a more precise translation, Strabo actually writes that Spain (and he certainly means Hispania) resembles an ox hide, just as Sicily is akin to a triangle and the Peloponnese to a plane-leaf (128). Strabo, more importantly, argues that a totalizing image of a landmass is not at all the ideal manner by which to derive information through geographical inquiry. He writes, just a few lines earlier, that when gleaning geographical detail it is best to separate territories into limbs: “the best way to define a country is by the rivers, mountains, or sea; also, where possible, by the nation or nations [who inhabit it], and by its size and configuration” (127). With respect to epistemology, therefore, one is encouraged to deconstruct a landmass limb by limb, with special attention paid to the configuration of the individual geographical and sociological parts, rather than drawing conclusions from an all-encompassing, macro perspective.
Whatever was Strabo's intent, that bullfighting is commonly referred to as Spain's fiesta nacional points toward the indisputable fact that the bull has become a symbol widely contextualized within Spanish literature, art, and cinema as a kind of totemic identity image that is imbued with qualities meant to describe, affirm, and at times reject national character. The controversial nature of the practice has recently come to a head with the July 2010 prohibition of bullfighting by the Catalonian Generalitat. This proclamation, as well as RTVE's decision in January 2011 to limit broadcasts of bullfights during hours when children tend to watch television, have sparked a ripple effect throughout Spain on both sides of the proverbial political aisle. In Catalonia, the prohibition was justified on the grounds of animal cruelty.
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- Iberian ModalitiesA Relational Approach to the Study of Culture in the Iberian Peninsula, pp. 143 - 161Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2013