Preaching Power


Book Description

This book uses a gender perspective to examine sermons and other officially endorsed discourses of the Catholic Church in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Mexico City. Analyzing the different ways that, over time, gendered images, metaphors, and hagiographical examples were used in sermons and other documents, the book examines how the church negotiated challenges to its cultural and ideological hegemony. Beginning with sermons from the early eighteenth century, the author follows the evolution of church discourses as preachers reveled in Baroque analogies, embraced ideals of the Enlightenment, targeted women's alleged moral vices at times of political crisis, and ultimately turned to notions of women as "the devout sex" in order to combat incipient liberalism. Put another way, liberals after independence were not the only ones to assert a kind of "republican motherhood": preachers countered with a vision of "Catholic motherhood" that had great resonance in Mexico even into the twentieth century.






















Nos d. Francisco Antonio Lorenzana, por la gracia de Dios, y de la Santa sede apostólica arzobispo de México ... A nuestros muy amados súbditos los parrocos, doctores, cathedráticos, maestros, confesores, predicadores, y demás personas, á cuyo cargo está la enseñanza, y educación de la juventud, y el cuydado, y dirección de las almas en este nuestro arzobispado: Salud ... El exercitarse los soldados en las funciones militares en tiempo de paz para estar expertos en el de guerra ...


Book Description




Nos D. Francisco Antonio Lorenzana, por la gracia de Dios, y de la Santa Sede Apostólica Arzobispo de México ... &c


Book Description

Rare decree by the Archbishop of Mexico City ordering the management of the city by geography rather than race and establishing the perimeters of the new jurisdictions: 16 parishes for religious purposes, eliminating a previous system under which Indians, Spaniards, mestizos, mulattos, and other castes were administered under separate parishes; this reform had its roots in the Council organized by Lorenzana in Mexico.