Geography and the Enlightenment: Patriotic Views of the Port City of Havana, 1761–1791

This article focuses on how two Spanish American Creole writers perceived their port city as a symbol of national prestige, devoted patriotism, and utilitarian significance, at a time when the military and economic status of the port was undergoing transformational changes. It centers on the works o...

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Main Author: Mariselle Meléndez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Latin American Studies Association 2018-03-01
Series:Latin American Research Review
Online Access:https://larrlasa.org/articles/257
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spelling doaj-4211dc932cb54217a4361ad0d65779ac2020-11-25T01:13:43ZengLatin American Studies AssociationLatin American Research Review0023-87911542-42782018-03-0153113915110.25222/larr.257105Geography and the Enlightenment: Patriotic Views of the Port City of Havana, 1761–1791Mariselle Meléndez0University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignThis article focuses on how two Spanish American Creole writers perceived their port city as a symbol of national prestige, devoted patriotism, and utilitarian significance, at a time when the military and economic status of the port was undergoing transformational changes. It centers on the works of two eighteenth-century Cuban writers, José Martín Félix de Arrate’s 'Llave del Nuevo Mundo, antemural de las Indias Occidentales: La Habana descripta' (1761) and Ignacio José de Urrutia y Montoya’s 'Teatro histórico, jurídico y político-militar de la Isla Fernandina de Cuba y principalmente de su capital La Habana' (1791), to show the ways in which these authors articulated their love for their country while endowing the port and the port city with local political power and cultural prestige. This sense of “topophilia,” a concept described by geographer Yi-Fu Tuan as the “affective bond between people and place,” is what guided the aforementioned authors’ geographic view of the port.https://larrlasa.org/articles/257
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mariselle Meléndez
spellingShingle Mariselle Meléndez
Geography and the Enlightenment: Patriotic Views of the Port City of Havana, 1761–1791
Latin American Research Review
author_facet Mariselle Meléndez
author_sort Mariselle Meléndez
title Geography and the Enlightenment: Patriotic Views of the Port City of Havana, 1761–1791
title_short Geography and the Enlightenment: Patriotic Views of the Port City of Havana, 1761–1791
title_full Geography and the Enlightenment: Patriotic Views of the Port City of Havana, 1761–1791
title_fullStr Geography and the Enlightenment: Patriotic Views of the Port City of Havana, 1761–1791
title_full_unstemmed Geography and the Enlightenment: Patriotic Views of the Port City of Havana, 1761–1791
title_sort geography and the enlightenment: patriotic views of the port city of havana, 1761–1791
publisher Latin American Studies Association
series Latin American Research Review
issn 0023-8791
1542-4278
publishDate 2018-03-01
description This article focuses on how two Spanish American Creole writers perceived their port city as a symbol of national prestige, devoted patriotism, and utilitarian significance, at a time when the military and economic status of the port was undergoing transformational changes. It centers on the works of two eighteenth-century Cuban writers, José Martín Félix de Arrate’s 'Llave del Nuevo Mundo, antemural de las Indias Occidentales: La Habana descripta' (1761) and Ignacio José de Urrutia y Montoya’s 'Teatro histórico, jurídico y político-militar de la Isla Fernandina de Cuba y principalmente de su capital La Habana' (1791), to show the ways in which these authors articulated their love for their country while endowing the port and the port city with local political power and cultural prestige. This sense of “topophilia,” a concept described by geographer Yi-Fu Tuan as the “affective bond between people and place,” is what guided the aforementioned authors’ geographic view of the port.
url https://larrlasa.org/articles/257
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