2026-01-19T17:14:16Z
2026-01-19T17:14:16Z
2022
2026-01-19T17:14:16Z
info:eu-repo/date/embargoEnd/2126-01-01
This article compares two twelfth-century Iberian dynastic chronicles to show the ways in which Muslim and Christian hegemonic masculinities were textually constructed as relational to high-status males of the same and rival religious faiths. I explore the roles religion plays in shaping the concept of hegemonic masculinity, in constituting the royal protagonist¿s elevated political and masculine status, and in positioning allies and foes in relation to the sovereign as well as within the spectrum of masculinities. Drawing on John Tosh's notion of a 'reciprocal relationship' between the political and the masculine virtues, and on Stephen Boyd's thesis of a 'convenient symbiosis' between divine omnipotence and masculine dominance, I argue that religiosity functions as a key virtue that constitutes normative or ideal royal hegemonic masculinity in both chronicles. Yet, when positioning other high-status men in relation to the royal hero, religious identity appears to be less decisive than other gendered qualities and practices, since neither chronicler automatically equates religious alterity with deviant masculinity. The comparison focuses on three themes: royal hegemonic masculinity, religious identity and masculinity, and the geography of warrior hegemonic masculinity.
Artículo
Versión publicada
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The University of Chicago Press
Speculum. 2022;97(3):737-74.
© 2022 Medieval Academy of America. All rights reserved. Published by The University of Chicago Press for theMedieval Academy of America. https://doi.org/10.1086/720162