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Media type:
E-Book
Title:
After conversion
:
Iberia and the emergence of modernity
Contains:
Introduction
/ Mercedes García-Arenal ; PART 1. Biblical Culture, Jewish Antiquities and New Forms of Sacred History. Nebuchadnezzar's Jewish legions: sephardic legends' journey from Biblical Polemic to humanist history
Biblical translations and literalness in early modern Spain
/ Fernando Rodríguez Mediano
Language as archive: etymologies and the remote history of Spain
/ Valeria López Fadul
The search for evidence: the relics of martyred saints and their worship in Cordoba after the Council of Trent
/ Cécile Vincent-Cassy ; PART 2. Iberian Polemics, Readings fo the Qur'ān and the Rise of European Orientalism. Textual Agnogenesis and the polysemy of the reader: early modern European readings of the Qur'ānic embryology
A witness of their own nation: on the influence of Juan Andrés
/ Ryan Szpiech
Authority, philology and conversion under the aegis of Martín García
/ Teresa Soto and
Polemical transfers: Iberian Muslim Polemics and their impact in northern Europe in the seventeenth century
/ Gerard A. Wiegers ; PART 3. Conversion and Perplexity. Assembling Alumbradismo: the evolution of a heretical construct
Doubt in fifteenth-century Iberia
/ Stefania Pastore
Mi padre moro, yo moro: the inheritance of belief in early modern Iberia
/ Mercedes García-Arenal
Tropes of expertise and converso unbelief: Huarte de San Juan's history of medicine
/ Seth Kimmel
True painting and the challenge of hypocrisy
/ Felipe Pereda.
Footnote:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 395-450) and index
Description:
"This book examines the religious and ideological consequences of mass conversion in Iberia, where Jews and Muslims were forcibly converted or expelled at the end of the XVth century and beginning of the XVIth, and in this way it explores the fraught relationship between origins and faith. It treats also of the consequences of coercion on intellectual debates and the production of knowledge, taking into account how integrating new converts from Judaism and Islam stimulated Christian scholars to confront the converts' sacred texts and created a distinctive peninsular hermeneutics. The book thus assesses the importance of the "Converso problem" in issues such as religious dissidence, dissimulation, and doubt and skepticism while establishing the process by which religious dissidence came to be categorized as heresy and was identified with converts from Judaism and Islam even when Lutheranism was often in the background