Problem of (proto)National / Ethnic / Regional Identities of Jesuit Missionaries from Central Europe in America
(Sprache: Englisch)
The theme of Christian missions in America, Asia, or Africa belongs to those relatively amply studied within the frame of early modern history, especially with regard to the history of European overseas expansion. However, the questions that historians have...
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The theme of Christian missions in America, Asia, or Africa belongs to those relatively amply studied within the frame of early modern history, especially with regard to the history of European overseas expansion. However, the questions that historians have posed to the plentiful and diverse sources have for a long time been simple and monotonous. Research has focused on biographic details, on the exotic settings of mission regions and their descriptions by missionaries, or on the fact that missions opened the path for the explorations and colonization of the newly discovered continents.Only in the second half of the 20th century, as a result of new approaches in historical studies, have historians begun to pose new questions to these notoriously known sources. Within the frame of such methodological innovations as transnational history or Atlantic history, the Catholic and Protestant missionary societies have been presented as examples of transnational communities, that is, communities composed of members of various origins, spread over the globe, creating and reinforcing their identities through specific discourse and rituals.The present text deals with a specific group of missionaries: members of the Society of Jesus, or Jesuits, from a specific region - Central Europe, more specifically from lands of the Bohemian Crown - and in a specific location - the possessions of Spain in America, in particular the northern frontier of the Viceroyalty of New Spain (contemporary Mexico) where many of those missionaries from Central Europe were engaged in the period 1680-1767.
Autoren-Porträt von Markéta Krízová
Markéta Krízová is a historian and anthropologist, specialized in the colonial and precolonial history of the USA and Latin America. As an Associate Professor, she teaches and researches at the Centre for Ibero-American Studies of Charles University in Prague. Her research focuses on European overseas expansion, colonialhistory of America, and the problem of cultural encounters and competitions. She received her MA degree in history and ethnology, and a PhD in Ibero-American studies at Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic. Her doctoral dissertation, La ciudad ideal en el desierto: Proyectos misionales de la Companía de Jesús y la Iglesia Morava en la América colonial [Ideal City in the Wilderness: Missionary Projects of the Society of Jesus and Moravian Church in Colonial America], was published in Prague in 2004. Her habilitation The Strength and Sinews of this Western World: African Slavery, American Colonies and the Effort for Reform of European Society in the Early Modern Era was published in 2008.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Markéta Krízová
- 2015, 33 Seiten, Maße: 14,9 x 21,1 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- Verlag: Leipziger Universitätsverlag
- ISBN-10: 386583955X
- ISBN-13: 9783865839558
- Erscheinungsdatum: 02.04.2015
Sprache:
Englisch
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