ABSTRACT

The study of the creation of canine breeds in early modern Europe, especially Spain, illustrates the different constructs against which notions of human identity were forged. This book is the first comprehensive history of early modern Spanish dogs and it evaluates how two of Spain’s most celebrated and canonical cultural figures of this period, the artist Diego Velázquez and the author Miguel de Cervantes, radically question humankind’s sixteenth-century anthropocentric self-fashioning. In general, this study illuminates how Animal Studies can offer new perspectives to understanding Hispanism, giving readers a fresh approach to the historical, literary and artistic complexity of early modern Spain.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|22 pages

The Hidden Dog

chapter 2|20 pages

A Cervantine Animal Exemplum

Animal Studies and “The Dialogue of the Dogs”

chapter 3|20 pages

When the Dog is a Book

A Post-Human Ethics in Cervantes

chapter 4|32 pages

As Death Approaches

The Dog in Las meninas

chapter |4 pages

Afterword

Amores perros