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Religious Culture in Modern Mexico

Religious Culture in Modern Mexico

This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Hardback

£108.00

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN: 9780742537460
Number of Pages: 292
Published: 01/02/2007
Width: 16 cm
Height: 23.5 cm

This nuanced book considers the role of religion and religiosity in modern Mexico, breaking new ground with an emphasis on popular religion and its relationship to politics. The contributors highlight the multifaceted role of religion, illuminating the ways that religion and religious devotion have persisted and changed since Mexican independence. They explore such themes as the relationship between church and state, the resurgence of religiosity and religious societies in the post-reform period, the religious values of the liberals of the 1850s, and the ways that popular expressions of religion often trumped formal and universal proscriptions. Focusing on individual stories and vignettes and on local elements of religion, the contributors show that despite efforts to secularize society, religion continues to be a strong component of Mexican culture. Portraying the complexity of religiosity in Mexico in the context of an increasingly secular state, this book will be invaluable for all those interested in Latin American history and religion.

Contributions by: Silvia Marina Arrom, Adrian Bantjes, Alejandro Cortázar, Jason Dormady, Martin Austin Nesvig, Matthew D. O'Hara, Daniela Traffano, Paul J. Vanderwood, Mark Overmyer-Velázquez, Pamela Voekel, and Edward Wright-Rios

Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Miserables and Citizens: Indians, Legal Pluralism, and Religious Practice in Early Republican Mexico
Chapter 3: "Para formar el corazón religioso de los jóvenes": Processes of Change in Collective Religiosity in Nineteenth-Century Oaxaca
Chapter 4: Mexican Laywomen Spearhead a Catholic Revival: The Ladies of Charity, 1863–1910
Chapter 5: Liberal Religion: The Schism of 1861
Chapter 6: Priests and Caudillos in the Novel of the Mexican Nation
Chapter 7: "A New Political Religious Order": Church, State, and Workers in Porfirian Mexico
Chapter 8: Rights, Rule, and Religion: Old Colony Mennonites and Mexico's Transition to the Free Market, 1920–2000
Chapter 9: Visions of Women: Revelation, Gender, and Catholic Resurgence
Chapter 10: Juan Soldado: The Popular Canonization of a Confessed Rapist-Murderer
Chapter 11: Religion and the Mexican Revolution: Toward a New Historiography

Martin Austin Nesvig

Martin Austin Nesvig is assistant professor of history at the University of Miami.

Collectively the authors address, often in imaginative ways, the breadth and depth of religiosity in Mexico and its consequences. * Hispanic American Historical Review * Religious Culture in Modern Mexico compliments Martin Nesvig's other recent edited volume . . . providing the most comprehensive overview of current research on religion in Mexico. * Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture * All the essays are well written and rooted in considerable scholarly research. . . . It should also appeal to anyone concerned with the role of religion and the Catholic Church in the modern era. * The Catholic Historical Review * This follow-up to Nesvig's earlier collection of essays on local religion in colonial Mexico is conceptually more challenging than the excellent colonial volume because of the paucity of the literature on religion (as opposed to the literature on church-state relations) in the modern period, and because of the complexity of the political context. It succeeds brilliantly. Individually, the essays reach high levels of scholarly excellence, but even more impressively, they come together to provide an exciting new perspective on Mexican history in both the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. -- Margaret Chowning, University of California, Berkeley