"[ T]his book offers a sweeping and carefully researched volume that will appear to scholars in art history, Latin American Studies, cultural studies, urban studies and related fields. It reflects the efforts of a determined scholar who aims to link the local, plaza, city, colony, and ultimately (Spanish) empire scales of analysis. This work will force veteran scholars to rethink their assessment of Spanish colonial spaces, and will guide younger scholars too." (European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies) Niell addresses an important gap in the research on Cubas heritage and promising interpretations will emerge from his work. Scholars and students interested on Latin American cultural, art and urban history, heritage studies, and those looking at the transition from the former Iberian colonialism to the modern colonial episteme will find this work enlightening and useful.
(International Journal of Heritage Studies) Niells text makes an important contribution to the Hispanic American discourse as he provides analysis and coverage of a grossly understudied area in Latin American and Caribbean studies: the art and architecture of colonial Cuba . . . His text will not only enliven the current discourse in Hispanic American studies but it is also timely and sure to be of interest to both area specialists and nonacademics alike as we attempt to decipher this moment of renewed cultural exchange.
(Winterthur Portfolio) Intellectual exchange across the Straits of Florida is now so common that Paul Niells excellent new book, Urban Space as Heritage in Late Colonial Cuba: Classicism and Dissonance on the Plaza de Armas of Havana, 17541828, comes as a very welcome relief from all things related to Cubas here and now . . . More than anything, Niells absorbing book reminds us that urban space as heritage is a potent vehicle for negotiating the here and now.
(Colonial Latin American Review) Paul Niells book is an important addition to the history of colonial architecture in Latin America, and in particular, a welcome addition to the genre of heritage studies . . . [ Urban Space as Heritage in Late Colonial Cuba] will be of interest to social and cultural historians, preservationists, public historians, and art and architectural historians. Neill has deftly explained the process of constructing public memory, a process full of complexities that requires careful navigation among competing constituencies.
(The Journal of the Southeast Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians) As an effort to understand Cuban architecture as both a component of the larger Spanish Empire and a product of its immediate political condition, the book is an important contribution to the history of architecture in Cuba.
(Choice) Like El Templete that emerges through Niells dense scholarly enquiry, his book is a carefully constructed mosaic. It should be read by students of heritage, historians and architects, art and architectural historians of the colonial Spanish Americas, and Havanas inquisitive citizens.
(Hispanic American Historical Review) Paul Niells book is an important addition to the growing literature on Bourbon urban reforms, presenting a fruitful combination of art history, urban history, and heritage studies . . . The strength of the book lies in its sophisticated analysis of the urban dimension of the Bourbon reforms in Havana, and for that alone it is worth a read.
(The Americas) This study makes important contributions to the burgeoning new scholarship on the eighteenth century, as well as to rethinking the Hispanic Enlightenment . . . Given the careful documentation and innovative methodology of this comprehensive study, I expect it will remain relevant for years to come . . . Niells work fits into a large, newer body of scholarship that updates understanding of the Hispanic Enlightenment and the emergence of global modernity.
(American Historical Review) Urban Space as Heritage in Late Colonial Cuba is a wonderful contribution to the small amount of existing literature that examines the cultural history of the Enlightenment in Cuba. It is also one of the few books that analyzes the art and architectural history of the Cuban colonial period in depth, while placing it in useful dialogue with works produced in other areas of the Spanish viceroyalties . . . Niell effectively connects important iconographic sources from around the Atlantic world to the typology of the Templete and its visual program in a way that should further inspire similarly compelling studies of the political ramifications of visual culture produced under late colonialism.
(caa.reviews) This book offers a sweeping and carefully researched volume that will appeal to scholars in art history, Latin American Studies, cultural studies, urban studies, and related fields. It reflects the efforts of a determined scholar who aims to link the local, plaza, city, colony, and ultimately (Spanish) empire scales of analysis. The work will force veteran scholars to rethink their assessments of Spanish colonial spaces, and will guide younger scholars too. (European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies)