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"Framing whiteness as a sensorial quality connate with ethical, aesthetic, epistemological, and ontological hierarchies, this edited volume examines how the category of whiteness shaped architectural theories and practices across the early modern period.What was architecture's role in race-making, constructions of whiteness, and processes of othering more generally? How was whiteness architecturally questioned, reinforced, conceptualized, practiced, and materialized? And how did whiteness intersect withcategories such as class, nation, gender, beauty, hygiene, and health? In examining these questions, this volume explores the ways premodern critical race studies allow us to reimagine the boundaries and possibilities of architectural research, design, and practice. The book will be of interest to scholars working in architectural history, art history, early modern studies, and the history of race"--

Framing whiteness as a sensorial quality connate with ethical, aesthetic, epistemological, and ontological hierarchies, this edited volume examines how the category of whiteness shaped architectural theories and practices across the early modern period.

What was architecture’s role in race-making, constructions of whiteness, and processes of othering more generally? How was whiteness architecturally questioned, reinforced, conceptualized, practiced, and materialized? And how did whiteness intersect with categories such as class, nation, gender, beauty, hygiene, and health? In examining these questions, this volume explores the ways in which premodern critical race studies allow us to reimagine the boundaries and possibilities of architectural research, design, and practice.

The book will be of interest to scholars working in architectural history, art history, early modern studies, and the history of race.



Framing whiteness as a sensorial quality connate with ethical, aesthetic, epistemological, and ontological hierarchies, this edited volume examines how the category of whiteness shaped architectural theories and practices across the early modern period.

Part 1 Constructing the Racialized Body
1. St. Francis/San Francesco:
White, Incorrupt, Divine
2. The Man of Swarthy Complexion: From Berninis
Biographies to the (De)construction of Color
3. "The Dead Body of a Moor":
Michelangelo, Anatomy, and Racecraft in Sixteenth-Century Rome
4. "To Blanch
an Aethiop": Inigo Jones, Queen Anna, and the Staging of Whiteness Part 2
Constructing the Racialized Body-Politic
5. Whitewashing Legibility: Property
Surveys and the Logic of Colonial Whiteness in Eighteenth-Century Senegal
6.
Muiscas and Moriscos from within the Spanish Grid: Privileged Mixed-Blood
Settlers in the Foundational Records of Villa de Leyva (Colombia, 15721582)
and Campillo de Arenas (Spain, 15081539)
7. The Appropriation of Mexican
Indigenous Material Culture: Architecture, Urban Design, and Antiquarianism
in Eighteenth-Century Mexico, Spain, and Italy
8. The Whiteness of Antiquity
and Salvation: Tullio Lombardo, Gianmaria Falconetto, and the Saint Anthony
Chapel in Padua
Dijana O. Apostolski is an architectural historian studying premodern histories of architectural design in relation to histories of the body, materials, and matter. She is a lecturer at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Aaron White is an architectural historian studying premodern architecture in its relation to empire. He is an assistant professor at Mississippi State University.