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引用次数: 0
摘要
在拉丁美洲殖民时期,居住在人口密集的广阔修道院的居民经常享受着令人惊讶的豪华私人住宿。虽然被称为细胞(celdas),但这些住所由修女、她们的女性亲属、仆人、奴隶和送到修道院接受教育的年轻女孩所占据的多个房间组成。Kathryn Santner以秘鲁阿雷基帕的Santa Catalina de Sena修道院为例,在《金钱和自己的房间:秘鲁殖民地的修道院细胞和自我塑造》一书中,研究了修道院细胞中的两个空间:estrado(女性客厅)和演讲厅。这些空间揭示了修道院细胞在修道院内个体修女自我塑造中的作用,以及在殖民地塞尔达多代、多民族家庭中发生的各种社会实践。
Inhabitants of expansive, densely populated convents in colonial Latin America often enjoyed surprisingly luxurious, privately owned accommodations. Although known as cells (celdas), these dwellings consisted of multiple rooms occupied by nuns, their female relatives, servants, slaves, and young girls sent to the convents for their educations. Kathryn Santner takes the convent of Santa Catalina de Sena in Arequipa, Peru, as a case study in Money and a Room of One’s Own: Convent Cells and Self-Fashioning in Colonial Peru, examining two spaces within convent cells in particular: the estrado (women’s sitting room) and the oratory. These spaces reveal the role of convent cells in individual nuns’ self-fashioning within the cloister as well as the variety of social practices that took place within the multigenerational, multiethnic households of the colonial celda.
期刊介绍:
Published since 1941, Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians is a leading English-language journal on the history of the built environment. Each issue offers four to five scholarly articles on topics from all periods of history and all parts of the world, reviews of recent books, exhibitions, films, and other media, as well as a variety of editorials and opinion pieces designed to place the discipline of architectural history within a larger intellectual context.