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A Grammar of the Corpse - Necroepistemology in the Early Modern Mediterranean (Paperback)
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A Grammar of the Corpse - Necroepistemology in the Early Modern Mediterranean (Paperback)
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No matter when or where one starts telling the story of the battle
of al-Qasr al-Kabir (August 4, 1578), the precipitating event for
the formation of the Iberian Union, one always stumbles across dead
bodies-rotting in the sun on abandoned battlefields, publicly
displayed in marketplaces, exhumed and transported for political
uses. A Grammar of the Corpse: Necroepistemology in the Early
Modern Mediterranean proposes an approach to understanding how dead
bodies anchored the construction of knowledge within early modern
Mediterranean historiography. A Grammar of the Corpse argues that
the presence of the corpse in historical narrative is not
incidental. It fills a central gap in testimonial narrative:
providing tangible evidence of the narrator's reliability while
provoking an affective response in the audience. The use of corpses
as a source of narrative authority mobilizes what cultural
historians, philosophers, and social anthropologists have pointed
to as the latent power of the dead for generating social and
political meaning and knowledge. A Grammar of the Corpse analyzes
the literary, semiotic, and epistemological function these bodies
serve within text and through language. It finds that corpses are
indexically present and yet disturbingly absent, a tension that
informs their fraught relationship to their narrators' own bodies
and makes them useful but subversive tools of communication and
knowledge. A Grammar of the Corpse complements recent work in
medieval and early modern Iberian and Mediterranean studies to
account for the confessional, ethnic, linguistic, and political
diversity of the region. By reading Arabic texts alongside
Portuguese and Spanish accounts of this key event, the book
responds to the fundamental provocation of Mediterranean studies to
work beyond the linguistic limitations of modern national
boundaries.
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