New Books in Christian Studies

Kevin Ingram, "Converso Non-Conformism in Early Modern Spain: Bad Blood and Faith from Alonso de Cartagena to Diego Velázquez" (Palgrave, 2018)

13 snips
Feb 7, 2019
Historian Kevin Ingram, a professor at Saint Louis University, dives into the complex experiences of conversos, Jews who converted to Catholicism in early modern Spain. He highlights their struggles with societal suspicion and the impact of 'limpieza de sangre' laws. Ingram explores how these converts carved out their identities through humanism and mystical practices, influencing the Spanish golden age. He also connects converso heritage to the artworks of Velázquez, revealing deeper cultural currents at play during this tumultuous period.
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ANECDOTE

How Ingram Found Conversos Research

  • Kevin Ingram recounts his path from English undergraduate to US PhD and then to Spanish Golden Age research.
  • A fascination with merchants and conversos in Seville redirected his doctoral interests toward early modern Spain.
INSIGHT

Hereditary Stigma Shapes Converso Lives

  • Conversos were converts (new Christians) who remained socially stigmatized across generations due to their Jewish origins.
  • This stigma blocked full assimilation and shaped their social and cultural responses in early modern Spain.
INSIGHT

Limpieza de Sangre Institutionalized Exclusion

  • Pure-blood statutes (limpieza de sangre) legally excluded conversos from elite roles and institutional positions.
  • Those statutes institutionalized prejudice and propelled much of the conversos' nonconformist responses.
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