Early modern Spain's insistent rhetorics of nation and kingship, of a monolithic body of shared values and beliefs, especially in respect of racial and gender stereotypes, and of a centralized and ostensibly absolutist legislative apparatus did not map unproblematically onto the complex topography of everyday life. This volume explores the extent to which these rhetorics and the ideology they helped to construct or underpin reflected or failed to reflect the realities of social, economic, and cultural life. It sets against their typically exorbitant claims the lived, messy, and sometimes contradictory experience of Spaniards across a broad social spectrum, both at the centre and at the margins, not just of peninsular society, but of the Hispanic world overseas. Confronting ideology were questions of economic pragmatism, executive feasibility, jurisdictional competence, and, above all, the social and political complexity of the Spain of the period. Contents Preface Richard J. Pym
1 Official rhetoric versus local reality: propaganda and the expulsion of the moriscos Trevor J. Dadson
2 Arbitrismo and the early seventeenth-century Spanish Church: the theory and practice of anti-clericalist philosophy Helen Rawlings
3 Law and disorder: anti-gypsy legislation and its failures in seventeenth-century Spain Richard J. Pym
4 Diego Hurtado de Mendoza and the Jewess of Venice: tolerance, interfaith sexuality and converso culture Alexander W Samson
5 Representing their sex: actresses in seventeenth-century Spain Melveena McKendrick
6 Public morality and the closure of the theatres in the mid-seventeenth century: Philip IV, the Council of Castile and the arrival of Mariana of Austria Alistair Malcolm
7 The politics of memory in El tuzaní de la Alpujarra Margaret R Greer
8 'Seguid la guerra y renovad los daños.': implicit pacifism in Cervantes's La Numancia Jules Whicker
9 Here and there, acá and allá: the origins of authority in Oviedo's Historia natural y general de las Indias B. W. Ife