Artigo Revisado por pares

Towers, Birds and Divine Light: The Contested Territory of Nasrid and “Mudéjar” Ornament

2011; Brill; Volume: 17; Issue: 1-2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1163/157006711x561712

ISSN

1570-0674

Autores

Cynthia Robinson,

Tópico(s)

Archaeological and Historical Studies

Resumo

This chapter employee's strategies of contextualization and interdisciplinary interpretation similar to those the author adopted in two recent publications concerned with the Mudejar phenomenon. Outside the context of discussions of methodology, to which the following two sections are devoted, Mudejar will be rejected as a useful designator of either a coherent group of monuments or a definable Islamicizing aesthetic. Topoi such as the towers, divine light, and birds that will form the particular focus of the chapter, while generalized throughout much of Islamic and Arabic speaking culture, acquire concrete associations once they are deployed in a Nasrid context. The Comares complex is the better understood of the Alhambra's two principal palaces. In the Mariale from Avila, as in Marian literature throughout Christian Europe, the Castilian Virgin is praised, among other epithets, as a sacred garden, a tower of refuge, and the Throne of Wisdom. Keywords:Alhambra; Castilian; Christian; divine light; Methodology; Mudejar; Nasrid; Virgin

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