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In Sexuality in the Confessional: A Sacrament Profaned, Stephen
Haliczer places the current debate on sex, celibacy, and the
Catholic Church in a historical context by drawing upon a wealth of
actual case studies and trial evidence to document how, from 1530
to 1819, sexual transgression attended the heightened significance
of the Sacrament of Penance. Attempting to reassert its moral and
social control over the faithful, the Counter-Reformation Church
underscored the importance of communion and confession. Priests
were asked to be both exemplars of celibacy and "doctors of souls",
and the Spanish Inquisition was there to punish transgressors.
Haliczer relates the stories of these priests as well as their
penitents, using the evidence left by Inquisition trials to vividly
depict sexual misconduct during and after confession, and the
punishments wayward priests were forced to undergo. In the process,
he sheds new light on the Church of the period, the repressed lives
of priests, and the lives of their congregations; coming to a
conclusion as startling as it is timely. Both Inquisition and the
Church, he finds, must shoulder much of the blame for eroticizing
the confessional. The increased scrutiny of clerical celibacy and
the disciplinary and consolatory function of the Sacrament, created
and intensified sexual tensions, anxiety, and guilt for both
priests and penitents, sexually charging the confessional and
laying the groundwork for the Sacrament to be profaned. Based on an
exhaustive investigation of Inquisition cases involving soliciting
confessors as well as numerous confessors' manuals and other works,
Sexuality in the Confessional makes a significant contribution to
the history ofsexuality, women's history, and the sociology of
religion.
The Counter-Reformation saw an upsurge of feminine religious enthusiasm without parallel since medieval times. Inspired by new translations of the lives of the saints, devout women all over Catholic Europe sought to imitate these "athletes of Christ" through extremes of self-abnegation, physical mortification and devotion. Just as in the Middle Ages, women's piety expressed itself especially in mystical experiences manifested in such phenomena as visions, revelations, voices, stigmata and ecstasies. This book offers a comprehensive look at this Golden Age of women's mysticism as it flourished in 16th- and 17th-century Spain, where it almost took on the character of a mass movement. For his study Haliczer draws on 15 cases brought by the Inquisition against women accused of "feigned sanctity" and on 30 biographies and autobiographies of women mystics. By examining their lives, Haliczer seeks to understand the forces that caused these individuals to choose a life of self-abnegation and ecstatic worship. Overall, he shows how mysticism provided women with a way to transcend, rather than to disrupt, the control of the male-dominated Church.
Stephen Haliczer has mined rich documentary sources to produce the
most comprehensive and enlightening picture yet of the Inquisition
in Spain. The kingdom of Valencia occupies a uniquely important
place in the history of the Spanish Inquisition because of its
large Muslim and Jewish populations and because it was a Catalan
kingdom, more or less "occupied" by the despised Castilians who
introduced the Inquisition. Haliczer underscores the intensely
regional nature of the Valencian tribunal. He shows how the
prosecution of religious deviants, the recruitment and professional
activity of Inquisitors and officials, and the relations between
the Inquisition and the majority Old Christian population all
clearly reflect the place and the society. A great series of
pogroms swept over Spain during the summer of 1391. Jewish
communities were attacked and the Jews either massacred or forced
to convert. More than ninety percent of the victims of the
Valencian Inquisition a century later were descendants of those who
chose conversion, the conversos. Haliczer argues convincingly
against those who see all the conversos as "secret Jews." He finds,
on the contrary, that a wide range of religious beliefs and
practices existed among them and that some were even able to
assimilate into Old Christian society by becoming familiares of the
Inquisition itself. Nevertheless, it was controversy over the
sincerity of the converted which spawned the first proposals for
the establishment of a Spanish national Inquisition. That very same
controversy, persisting in the writings of history, may be resolved
by Haliczer's stimulating discoveries. Inquisition and Society in
the Kingdom of Valencia is a major contribution to the lively field
of Inquisition studies, combining institutional history of the
tribunal with socioreligious history of the kingdom. The many case
histories included in the narrative give both Valencian society and
the Inquisition very human faces. This title is part of UC Press's
Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California
Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and
give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to
1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship
accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title
was originally published in 1990.
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