Men of God
Mendicant Orders in Colonial Mexico
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Nebraska Press
Published:10th Feb '25
Should be back in stock very soon

A broadly researched cultural history, Men of God offers a path to understanding the concept of religious masculinity through an intimate approach to the study of friars and lay brothers in colonial Mexico. Though other scholars have focused on the missionary work of the Augustinian, Franciscan, and Dominican friars, few have addressed their everyday lives and how the internal discipline of their orders shaped them. In Men of God AsunciÓn Lavrin offers a sweeping yet intimate history of the mendicant friars in New Spain from the late sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries.
 Focusing on these individuals’ lives from childhood through death, Lavrin explores contemporaneous ideas, from how to raise a boy to the friars’ training as novices, and the similarities and differences in the life experiences of lay brothers and ordained members. She discusses their sexuality to reveal the challenges and failures of religious manhood, as well as the drive behind their missionary duties, especially in the late seventeenth through the eighteenth centuries. Men of God also explores the concepts and realities of martyrdom and death, significant elements in the spirituality of the mendicant friars of colonial Mexico.
  
“Lavrin’s comparative focus on the three mendicant orders and the breadth of her chronological coverage combined with her internal focus on the gendered nature of the development of mendicant masculinities is unique and revisionist in the historiography. Men of God is truly a magnum opus in advancing our understanding of the mentality and alternate masculinity to which all the mendicant friars aspired.”-John F. Chuchiak IV, author of The Inquisition in New Spain, 1536–1820: A Documentary History “An erudite, elegantly constructed study of friars in colonial Mexico offering an innovative way to think about friars, not necessarily as political actors or proto-ethnographers or agents of global triumphalist Catholicism. Men of God demystifies friars, who are often treated as larger than life in the scholarly corpus.”-Martin Austin Nesvig, author of Forgotten Franciscans: Works from an Inquisitional Theorist, a Heretic, and an Inquisitional Deputy
ISBN: 9781496240446
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
432 pages