On June 11, 1485, in the pilgrimage town of Guadalupe, the Holy
Office of the Inquisition executed Alonso de Paredes--a converted
Jew who posed an economic and political threat to the town's
powerful friars--as a heretic. Wedding engrossing narratives of
Paredes and other figures with astute historical analysis, this
finely wrought study reconsiders the relationship between religious
identity and political authority in late-Medieval and early-modern
Spain.
Gretchen Starr-LeBeau concentrates on the Inquisition's handling
of conversos (converted Jews and their descendants) in Guadalupe,
taking religious identity to be a complex phenomenon that was
constantly re-imagined and reconstructed in light of changing
personal circumstances and larger events. She demonstrates that the
Inquisition reified the ambiguous religious identities of conversos
by defining them as devout or (more often) heretical. And she
argues that political figures used this definitional power of the
Inquisition to control local populations and to increase their own
authority.
"In the Shadow of the Virgin" is unique in pointing out that the
power of the Inquisition came from the collective participation of
witnesses, accusers, and even sometimes its victims. For the first
time, it draws the connection between the malleability of religious
identity and the increase in early modern political authority. It
shows that, from the earliest days of the modern Spanish
Inquisition, the Inquisition reflected the political struggles and
collective religious and cultural anxieties of those who were drawn
into participating in it.
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