Lexington Books
Pages: 150
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-6658-2 • Hardback • June 2018 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4985-6660-5 • Paperback • November 2020 • $47.99 • (£37.00)
978-1-4985-6659-9 • eBook • June 2018 • $45.50 • (£35.00)
R. L. Green is assistant professor of religion at the College of the Holy Cross.
Introduction
1. Creating an Identity
2. Establishing an Imperial Presence
3. Justifying Colonialism
4. Imagining Indigenous Religions
5. Sustaining the Evangelical Project
6. Expanding the Empire of Christ
Conclusion
By taking a look at the missionary conversion methods that the Spanish Jesuits used, Green gives a detailed picture of how closely entangled religion and empire where during the colonization period, and how such an entanglement led to the colonizing of, violence against, and the deaths of many people in the name of evangelization.
— Reading Religion
Green offers a much needed study of the colonial Spanish Jesuit theology of conversion which was grounded in a mission to label and destroy Indigenous worldviews and structures through their classification as idolatrous. This legacy of the demonization of Indigenous religions in the South Pacific persists today through the historical ethnographic research done by Jesuits that helped shape the field. Green offers an important historical study that has implications for our understanding of historical Jesuit works, contemporary understandings of Indigenous religion, and the manner in which empire, colonialism, and theology intersect in this historical moment.
— Michelle A. Gonzalez, University of Miami
Tropical Idolatry is an important contribution to Jesuit mission studies, offering an innovative look at 16th and 17th century Jesuit missionary activities in the Spanish Pacific through the history of Jesuit formation, theology, and spirituality. Green demonstrates the extent to which the Spanish Jesuit missionary project was entangled with empire, and yet he also shows how steeped the Spanish Jesuits in the Pacific were in their own institutional culture, spirituality, and theology.
— Tracy Sayuki Tiemeier, Loyola Marymount University
Tropical Idolatry offers a lucid and lively account of the efforts of the Society of Jesus to extirpate idolatry in Mexico, the Philippines and the Mariana Islands. Tracing the intellectual history of prominent Jesuit missionaries in the Spanish Pacific from 1572 to 1700, Green reveals the ideological consciousness at work in the religious legitimation of empire. This is a thorough, well-researched, and much-needed exploration of Spanish history and Jesuit thought in the early modern period.
— Carlos R. Piar, California State University, Long Beach