“<i>A Flock Divided</i> is an elegantly written and insightful work that casts new light on religious practice in the Americas. O’Hara has revitalised the study of race, religion, and politics in Latin America setting a new standard for historians interested in these themes.” - Alexander Hidalgo,<i> Itinerario</i>
“<i>A Flock Divided</i> is a well-researched and well-written book that makes several important contributions to the discipline. . . . O’Hara also adds significantly to our understanding of cultural, social, and political<br />developments in this transitional period of Mexican history.” - Jim Norris, <i>Western Historical Quarterly</i>
“<i>A Flock Divided</i> is based on careful archival research and offers new insights into the often hidden practices of local Catholicism and the role of religion in identity formation. . . . [T]his is an impressive work that merits careful attention.” - Brian Larkin, <i>Hispanic American Historical Review</i>
“<i>A Flock Divided</i> is true to its title. It is a rich, revisionist history that confounds old notions of indigenous passivity and obsolescence by bringing to light a trove of new sources and interpretations that furnish great insight into what being Indian was about over the<i> longue durée</i>. It is a welcome contribution to the history of early Mexico.” - Susan Schroeder, <i>Journal of Latin American Studies</i>
“[T]his is a brilliant and readable book that helps to elucidate the divisiveness of the parish system in Mexico during periods when the official government<br />(vice-regal or republican) was trying to get rid of caste boundaries in the Catholic Church. O’Hara does an incredible job of showing how parishioners and priests alike were frustrated by some government edicts and how they manipulated other edicts to their own benefit. . . . O’Hara should be commended for a job well done.”<br /> - Jonathan Truitt, <i>Bulletin of Latin American Research</i>
“Carefully researched, engagingly written, and strongly argued, <i>A Flock<br />Divided</i> will be mandatory reading for scholars and students of colonial and<br />nineteenth-century Spanish America for many years to come.”<br /> - Matthew Restall,<i> Journal of Social History</i>
“<i>A Flock Divided</i> is a pioneering work that contributes to a new understanding of Mexican history. It sheds light on many topics, including the intricacies of colonial and republican politics, the limitations of reform projects imposed by the church and by the state, the often difficult relationship between priests and parishioners, and the religious bases of civil society. This brilliant book also shows how much church documents reveal about popular culture and politics, from the persistence of ethnicity and race in shaping urban identities to the continuing importance of the parish and religious devotions as the locus of sociability.”—<b>Silvia Marina Arrom</b>, author of <i>Containing the Poor: The Mexico City Poor House, 1774–1871</i>
“Based almost entirely on extensive new archival research, primarily in ecclesiastical records, <i>A Flock Divided</i> is an original, thought-provoking, and compelling contribution to scholarship on late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth-century Mexico. Through subtle analysis and graceful writing, Matthew D. O’Hara illuminates the multiple intersections among race, religion, and politics.”—<b>Margaret Chowning</b>, author of <i>Rebellious Nuns: The Troubled History of a Mexican Convent, 1752–1863</i>
“[<i>A Flock Divided</i>] rests on an extensive base of sources from Mexican and Spanish archives, published documents, and secondary works on religious culture and Mexican colonial society. Recommended.”
- V. H. Cummins, Choice
“<i>A Flock Divided</i> is an elegantly written and insightful work that casts new light on religious practice in the Americas. O’Hara has revitalised the study of race, religion, and politics in Latin America setting a new standard for historians interested in these themes.”
- Alexander Hidalgo, Itinerario
“<i>A Flock Divided</i> is based on careful archival research and offers new insights into the often hidden practices of local Catholicism and the role of religion in identity formation. . . . [T]his is an impressive work that merits careful attention.”
- Brian Larkin, Hispanic American Historical Review
“<i>A Flock Divided</i> is true to its title. It is a rich, revisionist history that confounds old notions of indigenous passivity and obsolescence by bringing to light a trove of new sources and interpretations that furnish great insight into what being Indian was about over the<i> longue durée</i>. It is a welcome contribution to the history of early Mexico.”
- Susan Schroeder, Journal of Latin American Studies
“[T]his is a brilliant and readable book that helps to elucidate the divisiveness of the parish system in Mexico during periods when the official government<br />(vice-regal or republican) was trying to get rid of caste boundaries in the Catholic Church. O’Hara does an incredible job of showing how parishioners and priests alike were frustrated by some government edicts and how they manipulated other edicts to their own benefit. . . . O’Hara should be commended for a job well done.”<br />
- Jonathan Truitt, Bulletin of Latin American Research
“Carefully researched, engagingly written, and strongly argued, <i>A Flock Divided</i> will be mandatory reading for scholars and students of colonial and<br />nineteenth-century Spanish America for many years to come.”
- Matthew Restall, Journal of Social History
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Matthew D. O’Hara is Assistant Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Cruz.