Elizabeth Spragins is Assistant Professor of Spanish at the College of the Holy Cross.
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Description
Preface vii Introduction: Necroepistemology 1 1 Presence: Here Are the Dead 25 2 Absence: Disappearing the Royal Dead 45 3 Vitality: Wounded Narrators and the Living Dead 69 4 Assemblage: Recovering Diplomatic Power with Corpses 89 5 Erasure: Corpse Desecration for Narrative Control 110 Epilogue 135 Acknowledgments 141 Notes 145 Bibliography 195 Index 215
Spragins's innovative approach has produced an amazing vehicle through which corpses provide vivid insights into an event that occurred 445 years ago. . . Readers' eyes will be opened wide to the significance that the treatment of a corpse can have on the understanding of historical events long obscured by time. Future studies of Necroepistemology will greatly benefit from Spragins's groundbreaking work.-- "Hispania" Spragins's emphasis on corpses and the specific functions they take on in historical and diplomatic accounts is original and truly fascinating. A Grammar of the Corpse will be of interest to not only to scholars of the region and period, but also to those interested in a range of theoretical problems, including affect theory, new materialism, and new media theory.---Katharina Piechocki, University of British Columbia