1st Edition
Experiencing Time in the Early Modern Hispanic World After Apocalypse
Acknowledgments
INTRODUCTION: TIME IN EARLY MODERNITY
"Scattered in Times"
Time as Scythe
Chronos Resurrected
Chapter Overview
CHAPTER ONE:
Embracing Clock Time in Loyola’s Spiritual Exercises
Scheduled Devotion
Transcending Vanitas
Augustine: Time as a Problem
Achieving Duration
The Presence of Memory
CHAPTER TWO:
TIME TROUBLES IN TERESA OF ÁVILA’S LIBRO DE LA VIDA
"We are not angels"
Alumbradismo as Rejection of Time
Schooling Memory
The Time which is not One: Lux et Brevitas
CHAPTER THREE:
PIOUS SUBJECTS FOR A POST-MILLENARIAN NEW SPAIN
The Imperfect Conquest of Time
Mendieta’s Historia eclesiástica indiana: The End of Kairos
Gregorio López: Seizing Timelessness
Temporalizing the Life of Gregorio López
CHAPTER FOUR:
A NEW NEW JERUSALEM: SIGÜENZA Y GÓNGORA’S PARAÍSO OCCIDENTAL
Resignifying Baroque Space
The City as a Place of Memory
The Christic Bodies of the Patria
CHAPTER FIVE:
REDEEMED TEMPORALITY: THE INFINITE SELF IN SOR JUANA’S "PRIMERO SUEÑO"
Dreaming Wonder
The Permanence of Change
Resisting Allegory
Awakening
Solar Time
EPILOGUE
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
Biography
Ariadna García-Bryce earned a BA in Comparative Literature from Yale a PhD in Spanish Literature from Princeton. Her publications, which include Transcending Textuality: Quevedo and Political Authority in the Age of Print (2011) and many articles published in distinguished peer-reviewed journals (e.g. Renaissance Studies, Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, Revista de estudios hispánicos, Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies, Hispanic Review), have focused on a variety of topics within early modern Hispanism: the relationship between drama, religion, and painting; rhetoric and poetics; modern appropriations of Baroque aesthetics; gender representation; the connection between literary culture and incipient bureaucratization.






