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From Carnival to Corpus Christi
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This chapter assesses the relationship between Carnival and the annual Corpus Christi celebrations in late medieval and early modern Spain. Carnival has always been associated with revelry, subversive inversions of the social order, and transgressive behavior. Meanwhile, Corpus Christi is the high point of the Catholic devotional cycle in early modern Spain. Although it seems odd to juxtapose a feast such as Carnival with that of the Corpus Christi, there was a progression—uneven but perceptible—from the carnivalesque to the elaborate appropriation of some of these allegedly subversive themes of Carnival by the carefully programmed procession of the living body of Christ through the streets of Iberian cities.
Title: From Carnival to Corpus Christi
Description:
This chapter assesses the relationship between Carnival and the annual Corpus Christi celebrations in late medieval and early modern Spain.
Carnival has always been associated with revelry, subversive inversions of the social order, and transgressive behavior.
Meanwhile, Corpus Christi is the high point of the Catholic devotional cycle in early modern Spain.
Although it seems odd to juxtapose a feast such as Carnival with that of the Corpus Christi, there was a progression—uneven but perceptible—from the carnivalesque to the elaborate appropriation of some of these allegedly subversive themes of Carnival by the carefully programmed procession of the living body of Christ through the streets of Iberian cities.
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