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Between Exaltation and Infamy: Female Mystics in the Golden Age of Spain » (1st Edition)

Book cover image of Between Exaltation and Infamy: Female Mystics in the Golden Age of Spain by Stephen Haliczer

Authors: Stephen Haliczer
ISBN-13: 9780195148633, ISBN-10: 0195148630
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Date Published: August 2002
Edition: 1st Edition

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Author Biography: Stephen Haliczer

Stephen Haliczer is Distinguished Research Professor of History at Northern Illinois University. He is the author of Sexuality in the Confessional: A Sacrament Profaned (Oxford, 1996) and many other books and articles.

Book Synopsis

One day in 1599, in the Spanish village of Saria, seven-year-old Maria Angela Astorch fell ill and died after gorging herself on unripened almonds. Maria's sister Isabel, a nun, came to view the body with her mother superior, an ecstatic mystic and visionary named Maria Angela Serafina. Overcome by the sight of the dead girl's innocent face, Serafina began to pray fervently for the return of the child's soul to her body. Entering a trance, she had a vision in which the Virgin Mary gave her a sign. At once little Maria Angela started to show signs of life. A moment later she scrambled to the ground and was soon restored to perfect health.

During the Counter-Reformation, the Church was confronted by an extraordinary upsurge of feminine religious enthusiasm like that of Serafina. Inspired by new translations of the lives of the saints, devout women all over Catholic Europe sought to imitate these "athletes of Christ" through extremes of self-abnegation, physical mortification, and devotion. As in the Middle Ages, such women's piety often took the form of ecstatic visions, revelations, voices and stigmata.

Stephen Haliczer offers a comprehensive portrait of women's mysticism in Golden Age Spain, where this enthusiasm was nearly a mass movement. The Church's response, he shows, was welcoming but wary, and the Inquisition took on the task of winnowing out frauds and imposters. Haliczer draws on fifteen cases brought by the Inquisition against women accused of "feigned sanctity," and on more than two dozen biographies and autobiographies. The key to acceptance, he finds, lay in the orthodoxy of the woman's visions and revelations. He concludes that mysticism offered women a way to transcend, though not to disrupt, the control of the male-dominated Church.

Table of Contents

Introduction3
1Spain and the Golden Age of Mysticism9
2Women and the Saintly Ideal28
3Women Mystics in a Male-Dominated Culture48
4The Officially Approved Woman Mystic and Her Supporters80
5Sainthood Denied105
6An Uncertain Sword: The Spanish Inquisition and the Repression of Feigned Sanctity125
7A Counter-Reformation Childhood146
8Adolescence and the Struggle for Self-Assertion161
9Adulthood181
10Religious Life and Devotions213
11Between Power and Impotence: Social Role and Social Fantasies241
12The Perception of Sanctity: Reputation, Cult Formation, and Canonization265
Notes299
Bibliography335
Index345

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