The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby: The Cult of Vincent Ferrer in Medieval and Early Modern Europe

Awards:   Winner of Winner of the La corónica Book Award (Modern Langu.
Author:   Laura Ackerman Smoller
Publisher:   Cornell University Press
ISBN:  

9780801452178


Pages:   368
Publication Date:   24 January 2014
Recommended Age:   From 18 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Uncertain   Availability explained
Stock levels are unknown and need to be verified with the supplier.

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The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby: The Cult of Vincent Ferrer in Medieval and Early Modern Europe


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Awards

  • Winner of Winner of the La corónica Book Award (Modern Langu.

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Author:   Laura Ackerman Smoller
Publisher:   Cornell University Press
Imprint:   Cornell University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.907kg
ISBN:  

9780801452178


ISBN 10:   0801452171
Pages:   368
Publication Date:   24 January 2014
Recommended Age:   From 18 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Uncertain   Availability explained
Stock levels are unknown and need to be verified with the supplier.

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Reviews

The author has done well to let facts, legends, and evidentiary threads open one onto another into nets of quesetions and resources for future Ferrer studies. There is much to learn from this exemplary study of Ferrer's afterlife. -The Catholic Historical Review The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby is one of the most original books in the field of religious history that I have read in some time. It will serve as a new model for how historians might study a saint. Laura Ackerman Smoller takes all the sources-the saint of the canonization inquest, the saint of hagiography, and the saint of the fresco, altarpiece, and statue-and integrates them in a way that I cannot recall anyone ever having done before. She provides a superb reading of each individual component and a truly bravura reading of the inquest records. Smoller's fine-grained analysis of the continuous evolution of the cult of Saint Vincent is especially noteworthy. This is interdisciplinary history at its finest. -Philip Daileader, The College of William & Mary, author of True Citizens: Violence, Memory, and Identity in the Medieval Community of Perpignan, 1162-1397 The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby covers the story of Vincent Ferrer and his cult in such a masterful fashion that it will undoubtedly be the standard work in its field for a long time to come. Laura Ackerman Smoller's thoroughness is remarkable. She has plumbed every depth of the story and managed to turn it into an entertaining and relevant tale-a noteworthy achievement. -Robin Vose, St. Thomas University, author of Dominicans, Muslims and Jews in the Medieval Crown of Aragon


The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby covers the story of Vincent Ferrer and his cult in such a masterful fashion that it will undoubtedly be the standard work in its field for a long time to come. Laura Ackerman Smoller's thoroughness is remarkable. She has plumbed every depthof the story and managed to turn it into an entertaining and relevant tale a noteworthy achievement. Robin Vose, St. Thomas University, author of Dominicans, Muslims and Jews in the Medieval Crown of Aragon


The author has done well to let facts, legends, and evidentiary threads open one onto another into nets of quesetions and resources for future Ferrer studies. There is much to learn from this exemplary study of Ferrer's afterlife. -The Catholic Historical Review Laura Ackerman Smoller has been publishing interesting and informative articles about the cult of St. Vincent since the 1990s, and here she utilizes the larger canvas of a book to paint a more detailed and wider-ranging picture of how this Catalan friar was imagined and represented. ...[T]he prose is always clear and backed by wide research in sometimes arcane and difficult sources. Ending with a personal reminiscence of a visit to the church of Saint Vincent Ferrer on Lexington Avenue in New York City, this book provides a fine case study of a cult, demonstrating both the remarkable longevity of devotion to individual saints and the metamorphoses they underwent to achieve that long, posthumous life. -Robert Bartlett, American Historical Review (February 2015) Smoller deploys an impressive and exceptionally thorough array of sources, textual and visual, print and manuscript, and her readings are skilled and insightful. Her interpretation of the inquest records is masterful, as she ferrets out the 'small cracks' that hint at the otherwise lost experiences of individuals. Her analysis of the many Ferrers in the hagiographical literature is detailed and engaging. Smoller strikes a judicious balance between a Ferrer whose image was wholly shaped by elites and imposed from the top down and a popular cult that bubbled up from the bottom, finding instead a multiplicity of Ferrers and a cult that evolved and changed over place and time. The extended time frame, spanning the medieval/early modern divide, gives her analysis a depth not found in many similar studies. All of these qualities, coupled with the author's fluid and engaging style, make Smoller'sThe Saint and the Chopped-Up Babya standout in religious history and a methodological model for future studies. -A. Katie Harris, The Medieval Review The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby is one of the most original books in the field of religious history that I have read in some time. It will serve as a new model for how historians might study a saint. Laura Ackerman Smoller takes all the sources-the saint of the canonization inquest, the saint of hagiography, and the saint of the fresco, altarpiece, and statue-and integrates them in a way that I cannot recall anyone ever having done before. She provides a superb reading of each individual component and a truly bravura reading of the inquest records. Smoller's fine-grained analysis of the continuous evolution of the cult of Saint Vincent is especially noteworthy. This is interdisciplinary history at its finest. -Philip Daileader, The College of William & Mary, author of True Citizens: Violence, Memory, and Identity in the Medieval Community of Perpignan, 1162-1397 The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby covers the story of Vincent Ferrer and his cult in such a masterful fashion that it will undoubtedly be the standard work in its field for a long time to come. Laura Ackerman Smoller's thoroughness is remarkable. She has plumbed every depth of the story and managed to turn it into an entertaining and relevant tale-a noteworthy achievement. -Robin Vose, St. Thomas University, author of Dominicans, Muslims and Jews in the Medieval Crown of Aragon


The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby is one of the most original books in the field of religious history that I have read in some time. It will serve as a new model for how historians might study a saint. Laura Ackerman Smoller takes all the sources-the saint of the canonization inquest, the saint of hagiography, and the saint of the fresco, altarpiece, and statue-and integrates them in a way that I cannot recall anyone ever having done before. She provides a superb reading of each individual component and a truly bravura reading of the inquest records. Smoller's fine-grained analysis of the continuous evolution of the cult of Saint Vincent is especially noteworthy. This is interdisciplinary history at its finest. -Philip Daileader, The College of William & Mary, author of True Citizens: Violence, Memory, and Identity in the Medieval Community of Perpignan, 1162-1397 The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby covers the story of Vincent Ferrer and his cult in such a masterful fashion that it will undoubtedly be the standard work in its field for a long time to come. Laura Ackerman Smoller's thoroughness is remarkable. She has plumbed every depth of the story and managed to turn it into an entertaining and relevant tale-a noteworthy achievement. -Robin Vose, St. Thomas University, author of Dominicans, Muslims and Jews in the Medieval Crown of Aragon


The author has done well to let facts, legends, and evidentiary threads open one onto another into nets of quesetions and resources for future Ferrer studies. There is much to learn from this exemplary study of Ferrer's afterlife. -The Catholic Historical Review [W]onderfully nuanced and deftly argued... a skilfully layered exploration of not only the politics of sanctity and canonisation but also of late medieval and early modern piety. -Simon Ditchfield, English Historical Review (Vol. CXXX No. 543) Laura Ackerman Smoller has been publishing interesting and informative articles about the cult of St. Vincent since the 1990s, and here she utilizes the larger canvas of a book to paint a more detailed and wider-ranging picture of how this Catalan friar was imagined and represented. ...[T]he prose is always clear and backed by wide research in sometimes arcane and difficult sources. Ending with a personal reminiscence of a visit to the church of Saint Vincent Ferrer on Lexington Avenue in New York City, this book provides a fine case study of a cult, demonstrating both the remarkable longevity of devotion to individual saints and the metamorphoses they underwent to achieve that long, posthumous life. -Robert Bartlett, American Historical Review (February 2015) Smoller deploys an impressive and exceptionally thorough array of sources, textual and visual, print and manuscript, and her readings are skilled and insightful. Her interpretation of the inquest records is masterful, as she ferrets out the 'small cracks' that hint at the otherwise lost experiences of individuals. Her analysis of the many Ferrers in the hagiographical literature is detailed and engaging. Smoller strikes a judicious balance between a Ferrer whose image was wholly shaped by elites and imposed from the top down and a popular cult that bubbled up from the bottom, finding instead a multiplicity of Ferrers and a cult that evolved and changed over place and time. The extended time frame, spanning the medieval/early modern divide, gives her analysis a depth not found in many similar studies. All of these qualities, coupled with the author's fluid and engaging style, make Smoller'sThe Saint and the Chopped-Up Babya standout in religious history and a methodological model for future studies. -A. Katie Harris, The Medieval Review In this book, Smoller takes the study of Ferrer in a new direction by focusing very little on Ferrer himself, but instead on how others (whether wealthy and powerful lay locals, ordinary town dwellers, or the invested religious) made a saint out of him and crafted his image in such ways as to further their own agendas. She tackles this task head on, demonstrating an enviable ability to work in multiple disciplines and with numerous types of sources in several different media, while communicating her research results through the graceful and lucid prose her readers have come to expect from her work. Simply put, Smoller has produced an entertaining, educational, and highly original piece of scholarship that will serve as a model for religious historians to follow for some time to come... It is an important, thought-provoking, and entertaining monograph. Indeed, Smoller's enthusiasm for the subject radiates from the text, and she expresses her refreshing brand of humor on many occasions throughout the book. -Brian N. Becker, H-Italy (June 2015) The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby is one of the most original books in the field of religious history that I have read in some time. It will serve as a new model for how historians might study a saint. Laura Ackerman Smoller takes all the sources-the saint of the canonization inquest, the saint of hagiography, and the saint of the fresco, altarpiece, and statue-and integrates them in a way that I cannot recall anyone ever having done before. She provides a superb reading of each individual component and a truly bravura reading of the inquest records. Smoller's fine-grained analysis of the continuous evolution of the cult of Saint Vincent is especially noteworthy. This is interdisciplinary history at its finest. -Philip Daileader, The College of William & Mary, author of True Citizens: Violence, Memory, and Identity in the Medieval Community of Perpignan, 1162-1397 The Saint and the Chopped-Up Baby covers the story of Vincent Ferrer and his cult in such a masterful fashion that it will undoubtedly be the standard work in its field for a long time to come. Laura Ackerman Smoller's thoroughness is remarkable. She has plumbed every depth of the story and managed to turn it into an entertaining and relevant tale-a noteworthy achievement. -Robin Vose, St. Thomas University, author of Dominicans, Muslims and Jews in the Medieval Crown of Aragon


Author Information

Laura Ackerman Smoller is Professor of History at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. She is the author of History, Prophecy, and the Stars: The Christian Astrology of Pierre d'Ailly, 1350-1420.

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