ABSTRACT

Global Reformations offers a sustained, comparative, and interdisciplinary exploration of religious transformations in the early modern world.

The volume explores global developments and tracks the many ways in which Reformation movements shaped relations of Christians with other Christians, and also with Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, and aboriginal groups in the Americas. Contributions explore the negotiations, tensions, and contacts that developed across social, gender, and religious lines in different parts of the globe, focusing on how different convictions about religious reform and approaches to it shaped social action and cross-confessional encounters. The essays explore the convergence of religious reform, global expansion, and governmental consolidation in the early modern world and examine the Reformation as a global phenomenon; the authors ask how a global frame complicates our understanding of what the Reformation itself was and offer a unique and up-to-date examination of the Reformation that broadens readers’ understanding in creative and useful ways.

Demonstrating new research and innovative approaches in the study of cross-cultural contact during the early modern period, this volume is ideal for advanced undergraduates and graduates of early modern history, religious history, women's & gender studies, and global history.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

Global reformations: reframing early modern Christianity

part 1|2 pages

Conversion, co-existence, and identity

chapter 5|22 pages

“Turning Turke” the Anabaptist way

Muslims, Jews, Christian Spiritualists, and polemical discourse in the Dutch Republic, c. 1570–c. 1630

part 2|2 pages

Spatial and social disciplines

chapter 6|18 pages

Before the Ghetto

Spatial logics, ritual humiliation, and Jewish-Christian relations in early modern Florence

chapter 8|17 pages

Maintaining colonial order

Institutional enclosure in Spanish Manila, 1590–1790

part 3|2 pages

Cultural and religious politics

chapter 9|23 pages

The Renaissance papacy and Catholicization of the “Manichean Heretics”

Rethinking the 1459 purge of the Bosnian kingdom

chapter 10|19 pages

Creole conquests

Reformation, representation, and return in early colonial New Spain

part 4|2 pages

Life across boundaries