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Established in Peru in 1570, the Holy Office of the Inquisition
operated there until 1820, prosecuting, torturing, and sentencing
alleged heretics. Ana Schaposchnik offers a deeply researched
history of the Inquisition's tribunal in the capital city of Lima,
with a focus on cases of crypto-Judaism-the secret adherence to
Judaism while publicly professing Christianity. Delving into the
records of the tribunal, Schaposchnik brings to light the
experiences of individuals on both sides of the process. Some
prisoners, she discovers, developed a limited degree of agency as
they managed to stall trials or mitigate the most extreme
punishments. Training her attention on the accusers, Schaposchnik
uncovers the agendas of specific inquisitors in bringing the
condemned from the dungeons to the 1639 Auto General de Fe ceremony
of public penance and execution. Through this fine-grained study of
the tribunal's participants, Schaposchnik finds that the
Inquisition sought to discipline and shape culture not so much
through frequency of trials or number of sentences as through the
potency of individual examples.
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