To this end, the essays explore how specific products, texts, and people bridged ideas and institutions to produce multiple centers within Iberian imperial geographies.
About the AuthorAnna More, a professor of Hispanic literatures at the Universidade de Bras lia, is the author of Baroque Sovereignty: Carlos de Sig enza y G ngora and the Creole Archive of Colonial Mexico and the editor of Sor Juana In s de la Cruz: Selected Works. Taken as a whole, the authors also argue that despite attempts to reproduce European models, early Iberian globalization depended on indigenous agency and the agency of people of African descent, which often undermined or changed these models.Ivonne del Valle, an associate professor at UC Berkeley, is the author of Escribiendo desde los m rgenes: Colonialismo y jesuitas en el siglo XVIII, and several articles on Loyola and Jos de Acosta.She co-edited the special journal issue Carl Schmitt and the Early Modern World.