Alone Before God: The Religious Origins of Modernity in Mexico

Alone Before God: The Religious Origins of Modernity in Mexico

by Pamela Voekel
Alone Before God: The Religious Origins of Modernity in Mexico

Alone Before God: The Religious Origins of Modernity in Mexico

by Pamela Voekel

eBook

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Overview

Focusing on cemetery burials in late-eighteenth-century Mexico, Alone Before God provides a window onto the contested origins of modernity in Mexico. By investigating the religious and political debates surrounding the initiative to transfer the burials of prominent citizens from urban to suburban cemeteries, Pamela Voekel challenges the characterization of Catholicism in Mexico as an intractable and monolithic institution that had to be forcibly dragged into the modern world.
Drawing on the archival research of wills, public documents, and other texts from late-colonial and early-republican Mexico, Voekel describes the marked scaling-down of the pomp and display that had characterized baroque Catholic burials and the various devices through which citizens sought to safeguard their souls in the afterlife. In lieu of these baroque practices, the new enlightened Catholics, claims Voekel, expressed a spiritually and hygienically motivated preference for extremely simple burial ceremonies, for burial outside the confines of the church building, and for leaving their earthly goods to charity. Claiming that these changes mirrored a larger shift from an external, corporate Catholicism to a more interior piety, she demonstrates how this new form of Catholicism helped to initiate a cultural and epistemic shift that placed the individual at the center of knowledge.
Breaking with the traditional historiography to argue that Mexican liberalism had deeply religious roots, Alone Before God will be of interest to specialists in Latin American history, modernity, and religion.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822384298
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 08/30/2002
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 344
File size: 517 KB

About the Author

Pamela Voekel is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Montana in Missoula.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. The Baroque Backdrop


2. The Reformation in Mexico City


3. Freeing the Virtuous Individual


4. The Battle for Church Burials


5. Piety, Power, and Politics


6. The Ideology Articulated


7. The Rise of Medical Empiricism


8. The Heir Apparent


Conclusion

Postscript

Appendix

Archives

Notes

Primary Sources

Secondary Sources

What People are Saying About This

Allen Wells

This arresting study couples substance and style to transform what could have been a dry treatise on internecine clerical debates about dogma and inner spirituality into an intriguing and lively examination of the character of Mexican modernity sure to complicate our understandings of nineteenth-century liberal thought.

Deborah Poole

Voekel's engaging history of the debates surrounding burials and cemetaries in late colonial Mexico provides a fresh perspective on the origins of nationalist sentiments in Latin America. Her creative reading of wills and other archival materals will inspire historians and anthropologists to think in new ways about the role of religion in early liberal thought.

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