<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>This book examines the unexpectedly important role of mendicant orders in New Spain's cities during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and how their devotional programs shaped urban culture.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>This book examines the unexpectedly important role of mendicant orders in New Spain's cities during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and how their devotional programs shaped urban culture.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><i>Building Colonial Cities of God</i> is engagingly and elegantly written, refreshingly free of the academic jargon and devout references to Michel Foucault that mark some the other books.--Gauvin Alexander Bailey "<i>Latin American Research Review</i>"<br><br>[Melvin] presents a nontraditional interpretation of this middle period for the mendicant orders. . . . Recommended.--V. H. Cummins "<i>CHOICE</i>"<br><br>Deep in primary research and offering a strikingly original interpretation of the role of mendicant orders at the generative heart of Mexico itself, Melvin's study ought to be consulted by all serious students of New Spain for the foreseeable future.--Kenneth Mills "University of Toronto"<br><br>Karen Melvin gathers an impressive array of primary and secondary sources to offer new insights about the role of the mendicant orders in the development of urban religious and social life. . . Melvin is at her best in showing how each order attempted to distinguish itself from the others, yet considered themselves to be part of the global family of religious orders. . . Melvin has put together a well-researched and written volume that clearly supports her contentions and adds to current knowledge of the role and impact of religion in colonial Latin America.--Sonny B. Davis "<i>Colonial Latin American Historical Review</i>"<br><br>Melvin revises our understanding of the trajectory of both the Mexican church and of the mendicant enterprise in New Spain as a whole . . . Individual chapters in this book offer sophisticated and subtle portraits of urban religious life . . . Impressively researched, Melvin's study will be sure to revise our assumptions about the role of friars in New Spain as a whole--beyond the traditional focus on friars in the countryside, as language experts, or as missionaries to indigenous populations. The study will appeal broadly to social historians, sociologists of religion, and students of global religious history.--Martin Nesvig "<i>Bulletin of Spanish Studies</i>"<br><br>Melvin takes us beyond traditional emphases in space and time, moving from the rural to the urban and from the so-called 'golden age' of missionary activity in the sixteenth century into the rest of the colonial period. . . Melvin's book is a welcome addition to the scholarship on Spanish colonialism and early modern Catholicism. Built upon copious research across numerous archives, <i>Building Colonial Cities of God</i> opens a new vista onto mendicant presence in New Spain.--Matt O'Hara "<i>Journal of Latin American Studies</i>"<br><br>Melvin's subtle and detailed book addresses the culture of the distinct orders, the rivalries between them, and their relationships to the secular church and viceregal authorities . . . The conclusions are nuanced, and they make clear that the orders were distinctive in some ways, but also identifiable as part of shared mendicant traditions. In the end, we are left with a clearer understanding of these organizations whose functions were essential to the community of New Spain throughout the long colonial era.--Sean F. McEnroe "<i>Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History</i>"<br><br>This fine monograph contains much more about the particularities of each mendicant order's pious activities and identities, their relationships, and conflicts with each other, and their connections with the laity that cannot fit into a brief review. Historians interested in early modern religious orders of colonial Latin American religion will find this material valuable and this book in general a rewarding read.--Brian R. Larkin "<i>Renaissance Quarterly</i>"<br><br>Writing on the religious orders of New Spain is not an easy task. It demands solid research to examine the great variety of published and unpublished documents, books, article, and doctoral theses. That would be reason enough to appreciate this book of Karen Melvin. But the subject of her work is what deserves special mention. . . Melvin has dealt skillfully with this topic, studying the importance of mendicant orders in building the religious culture in urban centers of colonial Mexico.--Francisco Morales "<i>Catholic Historical Review</i>"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Karen Melvin is Assistant Professor of History at Bates College.
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