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引用次数: 0
摘要
摘要本文以背景为背景,介绍了西班牙裔美国人对19世纪中期反教权主义的最有趣、也最未被充分研究的回应之一:曼努埃尔Ramírez阿帕西奥(Manuel Aparicio)的《女修道院》(Los conventos suprimidos en m西科)(1861-62),这是对改革后果的独特评估,也是一项开创性的历史编纂工作,避免了任何简单的分类。这本书的作者是一位温和的自由党人,他不赞成抹杀天主教遗产,它开创了墨西哥的修道院历史流派,这是许多以文字和视觉方式保存逐渐消退的宗教记忆的努力中的第一次。这篇文章强调了决定作品方法论的第一视角解剖制度,揭示了Ramírez阿帕里西奥不可避免的历史变化概念背后的假设,并展示了国家物质遗产的概念如何与基督教化改革的想法相结合,旨在保证所有高贵、令人钦佩和有益的东西在修道院生活中的持久性,同时与自由党的主要原则相协调。
Autopsy, Patrimony, and a Christianized Reforma: Manuel Ramírez Aparicio's Mexican Conventual History, 1861–1862
Abstract The article offers a contextualized introduction to one of the most interesting and understudied Spanish American responses to mid-nineteenth-century anticlericalism: Manuel Ramírez Aparicio's Los conventos suprimidos en México (1861–62), a unique assessment of the Reforma's aftermath and a pioneering historiographical effort eluding any facile categorization. Penned by a moderate Liberal who did not endorse the obliteration of the Catholic legacy, it inaugurated the conventual history genre in Mexico, the first of many textual and visual efforts to preserve the receding religious memory in print. The article highlights the first-person autopsy regime that determined the work's methodology, uncovers the assumptions that underlay Ramírez Aparicio's conception of inevitable historical change, and showcases how the notion of national material patrimony, paired with the idea of a Christianized Reforma, aimed at guaranteeing the permanence of all that was noble, admirable, and beneficial in conventual life while reconciling it with the Liberal Party's main tenets.
期刊介绍:
Published in cooperation with the Conference on Latin American History of the American Historical Association The Hispanic American Historical Review pioneered the study of Latin American history and culture in the United States and remains the most widely respected journal in the field. HAHR"s comprehensive book review section provides commentary, ranging from brief notices to review essays, on every facet of scholarship on Latin American history and culture. Regular notices of the activities of the Conference on Latin American History appear in the journal.