The as-If of the Book of Kings. Thurner, M. Latin American Research Review, 44(1):32--57, January, 2009.
The as-If of the Book of Kings [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
Prior to the nineteenth century, the book of kings, or dynastic history, was the dominant mode of historiography in Europe and the Americas. This article explores the as-if or in-theory dimension of colonial dynastic history by way of a reading of Pedro de Peralta Barnuevo's early-eighteenth-century histories of Spain and Peru. Peralta's histories have been read as sycophantic, premodern texts that not only do not live up to the modern standards of historiography but moreover are in bad taste, that is, rhetorically prone to the excesses of Lima's colonial court culture. In contrast, I argue that Peralta's poetics of history reveal the subtle and ingenious rhetorical means by which history came to occupy, via imitating the figure of the prince, a sovereign and prognostic position of critique as the prince's simulacrum, that is, as a copy that has no original other than itself. In the case of Peralta's histories, this position of critique was colonial and postcolonial. (English)
@article{ thurner_as-if_2009,
  title = {The as-{If} of the {Book} of {Kings}},
  volume = {44},
  issn = {00238791},
  url = {http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=aph&AN=36575640&site=ehost-live},
  abstract = {Prior to the nineteenth century, the book of kings, or dynastic history, was the dominant mode of historiography in Europe and the Americas. This article explores the as-if or in-theory dimension of colonial dynastic history by way of a reading of Pedro de Peralta Barnuevo's early-eighteenth-century histories of Spain and Peru. Peralta's histories have been read as sycophantic, premodern texts that not only do not live up to the modern standards of historiography but moreover are in bad taste, that is, rhetorically prone to the excesses of Lima's colonial court culture. In contrast, I argue that Peralta's poetics of history reveal the subtle and ingenious rhetorical means by which history came to occupy, via imitating the figure of the prince, a sovereign and prognostic position of critique as the prince's simulacrum, that is, as a copy that has no original other than itself. In the case of Peralta's histories, this position of critique was colonial and postcolonial. (English)},
  number = {1},
  urldate = {2015-09-26TZ},
  journal = {Latin American Research Review},
  author = {Thurner, Mark},
  month = {January},
  year = {2009},
  keywords = {AMERICA, COLONIES, HISTORICAL criticism (Literature), HISTORIOGRAPHY, IMPERIALISM -- History, PERALTA Barnuevo, Pedro de, 1663-1743, PERU, PERU -- Politics \& government -- 1548-1820, SPAIN},
  pages = {32--57}
}

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