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dc.contributor.author | Bolufer Peruga, Mónica | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2023-01-18T10:07:28Z | |
dc.date.available | 2023-01-19T05:45:06Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2022 | es_ES |
dc.identifier.citation | Bolufer, Mónica (2023). “Gallantry and Sociability in the South of Europe: Shifting Gender Relationships and Representations”. En Andreu, Xavier y Bolufer, Mónica (eds.), European Modernity and the Passionate South. Gender and Nation in Spain and Italy in the Long Nineteenth Century, Brill, Leiden, 14-35. | es_ES |
dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/10550/85008 | |
dc.description.abstract | Este capítulo analiza de forma comparada cómo enjuiciaron las relaciones galantes entre mujeres y hombres, y en particular el vínculo entre una dama casada y un caballero conocido como cicisbeo, chichisveo o cortejo, algunos viajeros y filósofos del Norte de Europa que en el siglo XVIII visitaron Italia o España y de qué modos respondieron autores y autoras locales a esas miradas. Los primeros tendieron a interpretar esas relaciones en clave de adulterio, haciendo de ellas prueba de la incapacidad de los meridionales para controlar sus pasiones, por razón del clima o de la religión; solo algunos, más perspicaces o empáticos, comprendieron la lógica de una costumbre que daba respuesta a la intensa sociabilidad del siglo. Los últimos se debatieron entre compartir esa censura y justificar como moralmente respetable una galantería más auténtica y respetuosa, alternativa a la separación de espacios masculinos y femeninos propia de Gran Bretaña o a los “frívolos” hábitos impuestos por la hegemonía francesa. En cualquier caso, para los intelectuales españoles e italianos estaba en juego la moralidad y con ella la capacidad de progreso de su propia nación, cuestionadas por muchos observadores externos, y tanto aquellos como estos buscaban situarse en un mapa reconfigurado de las hegemonías culturales y políticas en Europa. | es_ES |
dc.description.abstract | This chapter analyses in a comparative way how some travellers and philosophers from northern Europe who visited Italy or Spain in the eighteenth century, in person or from their desks, judged the gallant relations between women and men, and particularly the bond between a married lady and a gallant known as cicisbeo, chichisveo, or cortejo. The chapter also looks at how local male and female authors responded to those views. The former tended to interpret these relationships as adultery, making them proof of the inability of the southerners to control their passions due to climate or religion More insightful or empathetic, only a few understood the logic of a practice that had its specific reasons in aristocratic values and in the intense sociability of the century. The latter often hesitated between sharing the critiques of the northerners and counteracting them. Some of them defended the Italian and Spanish forms of gallantry as a morally respectable and more respectful alternative either to the separation of masculine and feminine spaces typical of Great Britain or the “frivolous” manners imposed by French hegemony. For Spanish and Italian intellectuals, morality was at stake and, with it, the capacity for the progress of their nations, both being questioned by many external observers. They all sought to locate their country and grant it a proper position on a reconfigured map of cultural and political hegemonies in Europe. | en_US |
dc.language.iso | en | es_ES |
dc.relation.ispartofseries | Studia Imagologica. Volume: 32; | |
dc.subject | gender | es_ES |
dc.subject | modernity | es_ES |
dc.subject | nation | es_ES |
dc.subject | spain | es_ES |
dc.subject | italy | es_ES |
dc.subject | southern europe | es_ES |
dc.title | Gallantry and Sociability in the South of Europe: Shifting Gender Relationships and Representations | es_ES |
dc.type | book part | es_ES |
dc.subject.unesco | UNESCO::HISTORIA | es_ES |
dc.identifier.doi | 10.1163/9789004527225_003 | es_ES |
dc.accrualmethod | - | es_ES |
dc.embargo.terms | 0 days | es_ES |
dc.relation.projectID | Horizon 2020/ERC-2017-Advanced Grant-787015 | es_ES |