Spanishness and Race in North American Monumental Architecture

Author:

Beck Lauren1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Visual and Material Culture Studies, Mount Allison University, Sackville, NB E4L 1E4, Canada

Abstract

The representation of Spain, and Spanishness in general, at sites of collective identity in the United States and Canada requires scholarly attention. Many monuments, which range from statues and museums to capitol buildings and national parks, continue to commemorate colonial times despite broader public awareness of the association between colonization and racialized violence, as well as the explicit movement toward decolonization. This commemorative material also demonstrates how non-Spanish settlers have appropriated historical moorings of Spain and its colonial past to reinforce and whitewash their identities in places such as New Mexico and Texas, and even in Newfoundland and Labrador. How monuments are funded and gain public support is another vector that points to the ways that identity—particularly, white identity—informs monumental architecture in ways that exclude people of colour, as well as women, who, when featured in monuments, are usually dehumanized as concepts rather than being the actors of settler-colonialism. This article explores these challenging topics with the aim of articulating a roadmap for future scholarship on this subject.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference56 articles.

1. Giraut, Frédéric, and Houssay-Holzschuch, Myriam (2022). The Politics of Place Naming: Naming the World, Wiley.

2. Aljazeera (Aljazeera, 2020). Puerto Rico Looks to Colonial Legacy as Statues Tumble in US, Aljazeera.

3. The Other(’s) Toronto Public Art: The Challenge of Displaying Canadians’ Narratives of a Multicultural/Diasporic City;RACAR: Revue d’art Canadienne/Canadian Art Review,2019

4. Art Public Montreal (2023, October 05). Monument à Christophe Colomb. Available online: https://artpublicmontreal.ca/en/oeuvre/monument-a-christophe-colomb/.

5. Beck, Lauren (2019). Firsting in the Early Modern Transatlantic World, Routledge.

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