“This is a fascinating study of how the decision to establish a colonial archive required distinguishing European from colonial history and reimagining the role and place of the Americas in Spain, present and past. It demonstrates that the breakup of the Hispanic world was not unilateral, as not only creoles but also Spaniards, gradually moved to affirm that Spain and Spanish America were distinct. Hamann masterfully and convincingly shows that at the heart of the Archive of the Indies—an archive all historians of Spanish America use—is a hidden story about how our own field came to be and about what we have routinely seen but failed to notice.”
—Tamar Herzog, Monroe Gutman Professor of Latin American Affairs, Harvard University
“The Invention of the Colonial Americas takes the reader on an illuminating reconstruction of Seville’s Archive of the Indies as a physical place, one whose organization and content allowed eighteenth-century writers to sever the histories of Europe and the Americas. Byron Ellsworth Hamann’s innovative study—intellectual, spatial, data-driven, and always human in its focus—offers a necessary contribution to our understanding of the Spanish Enlightenment.”
—Jesús Escobar, Northwestern University
“A valuable book . . . the clear and direct writing is accessible to a wide audience including students of Spanish colonial history and independent scholars. A sturdy and well bound volume with full color illustrations printed on matte paper, this book is data driven and situated firmly in the field of media-archaeology.”
~Lane Goldszer, ARLIS/NA
“Immensely erudite and lavishly illustrated. . . . Sophisticated.”
~Miruna Achim, West 86th
“The ingenuity of this book comes from Hamann’s enthusiasm for building out unanticipated archival paths. He works via maps and architectural sections, economic records, letters, dictionaries, and historic photographs. The research is nothing short of herculean. Some will find its fine-grained texture unsettling, but few scholars have Hamann’s research acumen or spark.”
~Dana Leibsohn, Early American Literature