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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Amy G. Remensnyder (Associate Professor of History, Associate Professor of History, Brown University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.612kg ISBN: 9780199893003ISBN 10: 0199893004 Pages: 480 Publication Date: 13 February 2014 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: New Mexico, 1992 Part One: The Virgin and the Reconquest Introduction 1. Marian Monarchs and the Virgin's Realm 2. Heroes and History 3. In a Man's World Part Two: Spiritual Politics Introduction 4. Mary's Enemies, Mary's Friends 5. Lady of the Enemies 6. Mother of Conversion Part Three: New Worlds Introduction 7. Marian Conquistadors and Lay Evangelists 8. Our Precious Mother 9. Relics of the Conquest 10. The Return of the Virgin Epilogue: Medieval New Mexico and Mestizaje Notes Select Bibliography IndexReviewsRemensnyder's volume has the merit of uniting the history of the Spanish Reconquest and the conquest of the new continent. It brings together literature and history in a refreshing way. Both these approaches are too infrequently followed. -- Lesley Twomey, University of Northumbria, Speculum [D]etailed and complex....This is a dense, complex, and tightly woven book about Mary and her relationship with the Spanish over several centuries....This is a fascinating work, quite unlikely any other. --John F. Schwaller, H-LatAm In this admirably comprehensive and multifaceted reconstruction of the development of the Hispanic perception of the Virgin Mary as Conqueror, Amy Remensnyder displays staggering range and insight. The book covers nearly a thousand years of Marian history, from the origins of the Reconquista in Spain through to the re-conquest of New Mexico after the Pueblo revolts in the seventeenth century. A work of impeccable scholarship and impressive erudition, narrated with gusto and elegance, it is a splendid achievement. --Fernando Cervantes, University of Bristol Sailing smoothly not only across the academic divides that separate medievalists from modernists, and historians from literary scholars and anthropologists, but also across fourteen centuries and a huge colonial empire, Amy Remensnyder reveals the intriguing and ever-changing figure of La Conquistadora. Mary lives in a continuous tension between the universal and the local, mother of us all incarnated in a bewildering variety of statues, sanctuaries, cults, and epithets. In this fascinating study, Remensnyder shows how, in the context of interreligious struggles, Mary, and her supposed role in these struggles, took on meaning for a wide variety of people. --John Tolan, author of Saint Francis and the Sultan The ways in which the Virgin Mary's martial associations undergirded Spanish aims of conquest, colonization, and conversion among non-Christians across portions of the medieval and early modern Spanish world are where Amy Remensnyder begins. But, sensitive to her data, they are rarely where she ends up. La Conquistadora will animate the study of Christianizing settings in the early modern Iberian world, and of quite other times and places as well. --Kenneth Mills, co-editor of Lexikon of the Hispanic Baroque The author's thorough exploration of the wide use of Mary's symbolism by governments and dynasties, particularly the Spanish monarchy, gives this book encyclopedic scope and makes it a fine reference on the numerous roles that Mary has played for civilizations that have artfully deployed her image in settings as diverse as medieval kingdoms and pioneer outposts of the New World. --The Catholic Historical Review In this admirably comprehensive and multifaceted reconstruction of the development of the Hispanic perception of the Virgin Mary as Conqueror, Amy Remensnyder displays staggering range and insight. The book covers nearly a thousand years of Marian history, from the origins of the Reconquista in Spain through to the re-conquest of New Mexico after the Pueblo revolts in the seventeenth century. A work of impeccable scholarship and impressive erudition, narrated with gusto and elegance, it is a splendid achievement. --Fernando Cervantes, University of Bristol Sailing smoothly not only across the academic divides that separate medievalists from modernists, and historians from literary scholars and anthropologists, but also across fourteen centuries and a huge colonial empire, Amy Remensnyder reveals the intriguing and ever-changing figure of La Conquistadora. Mary lives in a continuous tension between the universal and the local, mother of us all incarnated in a bewildering variety of statues, sanctuaries, cults, and epithets. In this fascinating study, Remensnyder shows how, in the context of interreligious struggles, Mary, and her supposed role in these struggles, took on meaning for a wide variety of people. --John Tolan, author of Saint Francis and the Sultan The ways in which the Virgin Mary's martial associations undergirded Spanish aims of conquest, colonization, and conversion among non-Christians across portions of the medieval and early modern Spanish world are where Amy Remensnyder begins. But, sensitive to her data, they are rarely where she ends up. La Conquistadora will animate the study of Christianizing settings in the early modern Iberian world, and of quite other times and places as well. --Kenneth Mills, co-editor of Lexikon of the Hispanic Baroque In this admirably comprehensive and multifaceted reconstruction of the development of the Hispanic perception of the Virgin Mary as Conqueror, Amy Remensnyder displays staggering range and insight. The book covers nearly a thousand years of Marian history, from the origins of the Reconquista in Spain through to the re-conquest of New Mexico after the Pueblo revolts in the seventeenth century. A work of impeccable scholarship and impressive erudition, narrated with gusto and elegance, it is a splendid achievement. --Fernando Cervantes, University of Bristol Sailing smoothly not only across the academic divides that separate medievalists from modernists, and historians from literary scholars and anthropologists, but also across fourteen centuries and a huge colonial empire, Amy Remensnyder reveals the intriguing and ever-changing figure of La Conquistadora. Mary lives in a continuous tension between the universal and the local, mother of us all incarnated in a bewildering variety of statues, sanctuaries, cults, and epithets. In this fascinating study, Remensnyder shows how, in the context of interreligious struggles, Mary, and her supposed role in these struggles, took on meaning for a wide variety of people. --John Tolan, author of Saint Francis and the Sultan The ways in which the Virgin Mary's martial associations undergirded Spanish aims of conquest, colonization, and conversion among non-Christians across portions of the medieval and early modern Spanish world are where Amy Remensnyder begins. But, sensitive to her data, they are rarely where she ends up. La Conquistadora will animate the study of Christianizing settings in the early modern Iberian world, and of quite other times and places as well. --Kenneth Mills, co-editor of Lexikon of the Hispanic Baroque The author's thorough exploration of the wide use of Mary's symbolism by governments and dynasties, particularly the Spanish monarchy, gives this book encyclopedic scope and makes it a fine reference on the numerous roles that Mary has played for civilizations that have artfully deployed her image in settings as diverse as medieval kingdoms and pioneer outposts of the New World. --The Catholic Historical Review Author InformationAmy G. Remensnyder is Associate Professor of History at Brown University. She is the author of Remembering Kings Past: Monastic Foundation Legends in Medieval Southern France and a co-editor of Why the Middle Ages Matter: Medieval Light on Modern Injustice. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |