The marañones and the Polemics of Conquest: Rhetoric and Political ideas in Lope de Aguirre´s letter to Philip II

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Abstract

During the summer of 1561 in Venezuela, the rebel Lope de Aguirre wrote several letters addressed to his political enemies on both sides of the Atlantic. The most important of these documents was the letter sent to Philip II, king of Spain. In this letter, Aguirre incorporated legal terminology while simultaneously adopting a burlesque and prophetic tone to effectively address the Spanish possession of America. Contrary to the predominant image of Aguirre as an irrational being in the documents and the historiography of that period, this paper shows the rhetorical logic of Aguirre´s famous letter. Therefore, the letter is best understood as an attempt to justify a political position.

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Julián Díez Torres

Author Biography

Julián Díez Torres, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill



Díez Torres, J. (2018). The marañones and the Polemics of Conquest: Rhetoric and Political ideas in Lope de Aguirre´s letter to Philip II. ALPHA: Revista De Artes, Letras Y Filosofía, 2(33), 201-214. Retrieved from https://revistaalpha.ulagos.cl/index.php/alpha/article/view/1791

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