The Debate on the Decline of Spain
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Manchester University Press
Published:1st Sep '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
When, why and how did Spain fall from its pre-eminent position as a leading world power in the seventeenth century? These fundamental questions have exercised the minds of distinguished historians such as Prescott, Merriman, Hamilton, Braudel, Vilar, Vicens Vives, Elliott and Kamen and produced a prolific amount of writing. But while the subject of Spain’s decline has been subject to rigorous historical research, the debate between scholars underpinning it has not thus far been analyzed from a historiographical perspective. What are the methodologies and schools of inquiry that have shaped the discourse? How have historians’ perceptions been influenced by time and circumstance? Why has the ‘Two Spains’ phenomenon endured as a historical paradigm against which to measure its fortunes? These are some of the issues this book will address in its appraisal of the historians of Spain’s decline and their discourse.
Rawlings’ well informed, finely structured and clearly written book makes a valuable
contribution to the study of one of the main themes in Spanish historiography.
All in all, Rawlings’ book will be an indispensable tool for scholars
and teachers of early modern Spain.
ISBN: 9780719079641
Dimensions: 216mm x 138mm x 10mm
Weight: 231g
192 pages