Reviews
Offers a sharp critique, or rather a series of critiques, of the conventional historiography of early modern Spanish religion [and] a series of valuable case studies of Catholic thought and practice... The book is beautifully written, and adds drama, emotion, and even humor to what might otherwise seem arcane ecclesiastical or scholarly disputes.
A penetrating and convincing work of revisionist history. Few scholarly books from the start clearly mark a watershed in the interpretation of history. This one magisterially does.
With clear writing and convincing scholarship, Homza has successfully challenged a long-standing paradigm in Spanish historical studies... Homza has rescued Spanish intellectual history from its paralyzingly rigid past... [and] discovered a dynamic intellectual world where theologians skillfully joined old authorities and new techniques as they groped for answers.
Meticulous and engaging scholarship... The challenges [Homza] poses to questions of periodization and categorization should be a model for future studies of the religious, cultural, and intellectual currents of sixteenth-century Europe.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Note on Translations
Introduction
Chapter 1. The Trial of Juan de Vegara
Chapter 2. Erasmus and the New Testament: The Valladolid Conference of 1527
Chapter 3. A Converso and the Old
Acknowledgments
Note on Translations
Introduction
Chapter 1. The Trial of Juan de Vegara
Chapter 2. Erasmus and the New Testament: The Valladolid Conference of 1527
Chapter 3. A Converso and the Old Testament: The Literal Sense of Scripture
Chapter 4. The Construction of the Shepherd
Chapter 5. The Formation of the Flock
Chapter 6. The Bewitching of the Sheep
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index