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Books > Religion & Spirituality > General > History of religion
By comparing the intersecting histories of interpretation of Mary
Magdalene, a first-century disciple of Jesus, and La Malinche, a
sixteenth-century Mesoamerican woman enslaved by the Spanish
conquistadores, Jennifer Vija Pietz critically evaluates the use of
past lives to address contemporaneous concerns. She demonstrates
how the earliest sources portray each woman as an agent in the
foundation of a new community: Magdalene's proclamation of Jesus's
resurrection helped form the first Christian community, while La
Malinche's role as interpreter between Spanish and native people
during the Conquest helped establish modern Mexico. Pietz then
argues that over time, various interpreters turn these real women
into malleable icons that they use to negotiate changing
conceptions of communal identity and norms. Strikingly, popular
portraits develop of both women as archetypal whores who represent
transgression-portraits that some women have experienced as
harmful. Although other interpreters present contrary portraits of
Magdalene and La Malinche as admirable emblems of female
empowerment, Pietz argues that the tendency to turn real people
into icons risks producing stereotypes that can obscure past lives
and negatively affect people in the present. In response, she
posits strategies for developing historically plausible and
ethically responsible interpretations of people of the past.
Women, Witchcraft, and the Inquisition in Spain and the New World
investigates the mystery and unease surrounding the issue of women
called before the Inquisition in Spain and its colonial territories
in the Americas, including Mexico and Cartagena de Indias. Edited
by Maria Jesus Zamora Calvo, this collection gathers innovative
scholarship that considers how the Holy Office of the Inquisition
functioned as a closed, secret world defined by patriarchal
hierarchy and grounded in misogynistic standards. Ten essays
present portraits of women who, under accusations as diverse as
witchcraft, bigamy, false beatitude, and heresy, faced the Spanish
and New World Inquisitions to account for their lives. Each essay
draws on the documentary record of trials, confessions, letters,
diaries, and other primary materials. Focusing on individual cases
of women brought before the Inquisition, the authors study their
subjects' social status, particularize their motivations, determine
the characteristics of their prosecution, and deduce the reasons
used to justify violence against them. With their subjection of
women to imprisonment, interrogation, and judgment, these cases
display at their core a specter of contempt, humiliation,
silencing, and denial of feminine selfhood. The contributors
include specialists in the early modern period from multiple
disciplines, encompassing literature, language, translation,
literary theory, history, law, iconography, and anthropology. By
considering both the women themselves and the Inquisition as an
institution, this collection works to uncover stories, lives, and
cultural practices that for centuries have dwelled in obscurity.
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