Description

Book Synopsis
An investigation into how Catholicism was lived and experienced in the Archdiocese of Oaxaca during Mexicos turbulent late 1800s and early 1900s.

Trade Review
Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism is an important and much-needed exploration of the evolution of religion, both popular and ecclesiastical, from the late nineteenth century to the coming of Lázaro Cárdenas in 1934. Shrewdly avoiding stark dichotomies in favor of understanding how popular needs and practices interacted with church projects, Edward Wright-Rios offers multifaceted insight into the religious experience of turn-of-the-century Oaxacans.”—Terry Rugeley, author of Of Wonders and Wise Men: Religion and Popular Cultures in Southeast Mexico, 1800–1876
Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism is original, important, and deeply and creatively researched. A pioneering regional study of church and religion in the early twentieth century, it makes an important contribution to the literature on negotiated modernity in Latin America and to an understanding of the local reworking of Catholicism in Oaxaca in a time of troubles for the church and the Mexican polity. It is a rare achievement.”—William Taylor, author of Magistrates of the Sacred: Priests and Parishoners in Eighteenth-Century Mexico
“[A]n imaginative, complex, and valuable work. With ample sources, it offers a powerful portrait of institutional revival. With few sources, creatively worked, it eloquently recovers the elusive heartbeat of Indian Catholicism and women’s ever-evolving sense of devotional place. By connecting these realms, Revolutions provides fresh and sophisticated insights into the interactions of Catholicism and modernity. Students of Mexico and religion must read it.” -- Matthew Butler * Bulletin of Latin American Research *
“Wright-Rios’s ability to weave together church documents, popular accounts, and oral histories, as well as to engage contradictory sources, leaves us with a refreshing institutional and cultural portrayal of Mexican Catholicism.” -- Bonar L. Hernández Sandoval * Hispanic American Historical Review *
“Faith is a difficult thing to research. However, in his work Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism, Edward Wright-Rios does a wonderful job exploring just this topic. . . . Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism, and its well-researched and presented stories, are invaluable to anyone interested in religiosity in contested spaces, gender-faith-power relationships, and the power of popular devotions in the midst of cultural encounter zones (border spaces). . . . It also serves as a powerful instructional tool with stories that are compelling and at times surprising. . . .” -- SilverMoon * Ethnohistory *
“Gracefully written and informed by a wide-ranging grasp of religion’s intersections with political and economic life, especially in Oaxaca’s Indian communities, this endlessly absorbing book sets a new standard for twentieth-century Mexican religious history and should inspire comparative regional research for years to come.” -- Pamela Voekel * American Historical Review *
“The text in Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism is undeniably a significant and laudable academic undertaking. . . . Wright Rios brings to life the complexities of faithful devotion in the regional Catholic communities, the dynamic and sometimes contentious relationship between clergy and laypersons, as well as the ongoing negotiation and evolving interpenetration of Catholic religious traditions and indigenous customs and understandings of faith and the Divine. . . .[C]ertainly it should be hoped that more work from Wright-Rios is on the horizon.” -- Mark Noll * Missiology *
“Wright-Rios’s meticulously researched, engaging, and cautiously argued study is a model of balanced scholarship and essential reading for anyone interested in Mexican religious history.” -- Adrian A. Bantjes * Catholic Historical Review *

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations ix
Acknowledgments xi
Moving the Faithful 1
Part I. Reform
The Clergy and Catholic Resurgence
1. An Enterprising Archbishop 43
2. Crowning Images 73
3. The Spirit of Association 98
Part II. Revelation
Indigenous Apparitions and Innovations
4. Catholics in Their Own Way 141
5. Christ Comes to Tlacoxcalco 164
6. The Second Juan Diego 206
7. The Gender Dynamics of Devotion 242
Picturing Mexican Catholicism 271
Notes 291
Bibliography 335
Index 355

Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism

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    A Paperback / softback by Edward Wright-Rios

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      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 20/04/2009
      ISBN13: 9780822343790, 978-0822343790
      ISBN10: 0822343797

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      An investigation into how Catholicism was lived and experienced in the Archdiocese of Oaxaca during Mexicos turbulent late 1800s and early 1900s.

      Trade Review
      Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism is an important and much-needed exploration of the evolution of religion, both popular and ecclesiastical, from the late nineteenth century to the coming of Lázaro Cárdenas in 1934. Shrewdly avoiding stark dichotomies in favor of understanding how popular needs and practices interacted with church projects, Edward Wright-Rios offers multifaceted insight into the religious experience of turn-of-the-century Oaxacans.”—Terry Rugeley, author of Of Wonders and Wise Men: Religion and Popular Cultures in Southeast Mexico, 1800–1876
      Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism is original, important, and deeply and creatively researched. A pioneering regional study of church and religion in the early twentieth century, it makes an important contribution to the literature on negotiated modernity in Latin America and to an understanding of the local reworking of Catholicism in Oaxaca in a time of troubles for the church and the Mexican polity. It is a rare achievement.”—William Taylor, author of Magistrates of the Sacred: Priests and Parishoners in Eighteenth-Century Mexico
      “[A]n imaginative, complex, and valuable work. With ample sources, it offers a powerful portrait of institutional revival. With few sources, creatively worked, it eloquently recovers the elusive heartbeat of Indian Catholicism and women’s ever-evolving sense of devotional place. By connecting these realms, Revolutions provides fresh and sophisticated insights into the interactions of Catholicism and modernity. Students of Mexico and religion must read it.” -- Matthew Butler * Bulletin of Latin American Research *
      “Wright-Rios’s ability to weave together church documents, popular accounts, and oral histories, as well as to engage contradictory sources, leaves us with a refreshing institutional and cultural portrayal of Mexican Catholicism.” -- Bonar L. Hernández Sandoval * Hispanic American Historical Review *
      “Faith is a difficult thing to research. However, in his work Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism, Edward Wright-Rios does a wonderful job exploring just this topic. . . . Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism, and its well-researched and presented stories, are invaluable to anyone interested in religiosity in contested spaces, gender-faith-power relationships, and the power of popular devotions in the midst of cultural encounter zones (border spaces). . . . It also serves as a powerful instructional tool with stories that are compelling and at times surprising. . . .” -- SilverMoon * Ethnohistory *
      “Gracefully written and informed by a wide-ranging grasp of religion’s intersections with political and economic life, especially in Oaxaca’s Indian communities, this endlessly absorbing book sets a new standard for twentieth-century Mexican religious history and should inspire comparative regional research for years to come.” -- Pamela Voekel * American Historical Review *
      “The text in Revolutions in Mexican Catholicism is undeniably a significant and laudable academic undertaking. . . . Wright Rios brings to life the complexities of faithful devotion in the regional Catholic communities, the dynamic and sometimes contentious relationship between clergy and laypersons, as well as the ongoing negotiation and evolving interpenetration of Catholic religious traditions and indigenous customs and understandings of faith and the Divine. . . .[C]ertainly it should be hoped that more work from Wright-Rios is on the horizon.” -- Mark Noll * Missiology *
      “Wright-Rios’s meticulously researched, engaging, and cautiously argued study is a model of balanced scholarship and essential reading for anyone interested in Mexican religious history.” -- Adrian A. Bantjes * Catholic Historical Review *

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations ix
      Acknowledgments xi
      Moving the Faithful 1
      Part I. Reform
      The Clergy and Catholic Resurgence
      1. An Enterprising Archbishop 43
      2. Crowning Images 73
      3. The Spirit of Association 98
      Part II. Revelation
      Indigenous Apparitions and Innovations
      4. Catholics in Their Own Way 141
      5. Christ Comes to Tlacoxcalco 164
      6. The Second Juan Diego 206
      7. The Gender Dynamics of Devotion 242
      Picturing Mexican Catholicism 271
      Notes 291
      Bibliography 335
      Index 355

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