Preferred Citation: Perry, Mary Elizabeth, and Anne J. Cruz, editors Cultural Encounters: The Impact of the Inquisition in Spain and the New World. Berkeley:  University of California Press,  c1991 1991. http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft396nb1w0/


 
CONTRIBUTORS

CONTRIBUTORS

Jaime Contreras, faculty member of the History Department of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, has published numerous articles on the Inquisition and participated in many international conferences. His book, El Santo Oficio de la Inquisición de Galicia: Poder, sociedad y cultura, was published by Akal in 1982.

Anne J. Cruz, Associate Professor of Spanish, teaches Spanish and comparative literature at the University of California, Irvine. Her publications include Imaitación y transformación: El petrarquismo en la poesía de Boscán y Garcilaso de la Vega (John Benjamins, 1988); the coedition of Renaissance Rereadings: Intertext and Context (University of Illinois Press, 1988); and articles on Golden Age poetry, theater, and prose.

Jesús M. De Bujanda, who received doctorates in both history and theology, is Professor of History and also directs the Centre d'Etudes de la Renaissance de l'Université de Sherbrooke. He is author of Index de l'Inquisition espagnole, 1551, 1554, 1559 (Editions de l'Université de Sherbrooke, 1984), volume V of Index des livres interdits, a multi-volume project that he directs.

Richard E. Greenleaf, whose scholarship on the Inquisition in Latin America commenced publication in 1960, will publish his ninth book in 1991, Mixtec Religion and Spanish Conquest: The Oaxaca Inquisition Trials, 1544–1547 (José Porrúa Turanzas). Professor of History at Tulane University, he is also Director of the Roger Thayer Stone Center for Latin American Studies.

Stephen Haliczer is Professor of History at Northern Illinois University. Editor of Inquisition and Society in Early Modern Europe (Croom-Helm,


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1987), his new book, Inquisition and Society in the Kingdom of Valencia, has just been published by the University of California Press.

Stanley M. Hordes is a visiting scholar in the Department of History and the Latin American Institute at the University of New Mexico, as well as principal consultant in the firm of HMS Associates in Santa Fe, New Mexico. As co-project director of "Crypto-Jews: New Mexico's Sephardic Legacy," he has published several scholarly papers, including "The Inquisition as Economic and Political Agent: The Campaign of the Mexican Holy Office Against the Crypto-Jews in the Mid-Seventeenth Century," The Americas, 39:1 (1982).

Richard L. Kagan is Professor of History at The Johns Hopkins University, where he specializes in early modern Spain. In addition to Students and Society in Early Modern Spain (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1974), and Lawsuits and Litigants in Castile, 1500–1700 (University of North Carolina Press, 1981), he has published through the University of California Press both Spanish Cities of the Golden Age (1989), and Lucrecia's Dreams: Politics and Prophesy in Sixteenth-Century Spain (1990).

J. Jorge Klor de Alva, Professor of Anthropology at Princeton University, received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1987–1988. Named Curator for the anthropology and history sections of Expo '92 in Seville, he has edited two books, Encuentros interétnicos en el Nuevo Mundo: Interpretaciones contemporáneas, and Imágenes interétnicas en el Nuevo Mundo (both forthcoming from Editorial Siglo XXI). His book, Introduction to Aztec Culture: The Nahua Images of Self and Society, will be published by the University of Utah Press.

Moshe Lazar, Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Southern California, has carried out many years of research on the literature of forcibly converted Jews in Spain.

Angus I. K. MacKay is Professor of History at the University of Edinburgh. A specialist in medieval Spain, he has presented many scholarly papers and has published Money, Prices and Politics in Fifteenth-Century Castile (Royal Historical Society, 1981), and Spain in the Middle Ages: From Frontier to Empire, 1000–1500 (Macmillan, 1983, Third Printing).

Geraldine McKendrick recently completed her doctorate at the University of Edinburgh and now holds a lectureship at King's College in London. Cambridge University Press will soon publish her book, Franciscan Spirituality in Early Modern Castile .

Roberto Moreno de los Arcos has taught history at the Universidad Autónoma de México and is currently Humanities Coordinator. His many publications include Los nahuatlismos en el español de México (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Coordinación de Humani-


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dades, 1989) and Ensayos de bibliografía mexicana. Autores, libros, imprenta, bibliotecas. Primera serie (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Bibliográficas, 1986).

Mary Elizabeth Perry, Research Associate at the UCLA Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, is Adjunct Professor of History at Occidental College. A specialist in research on the social history of Spain, she has published Crime and Society in Early Modern Seville (University Press of New England, 1980), and many articles on gender and deviance. Her most recent book is Gender and Disorder in Early Modern Seville (Princeton, 1990).

Noemí Quezada is investigadora titular in the Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. An ethnologist who received her doctorate from the University of Paris, Sorbonne, she specializes in the cultures of colonial Latin America. Her publications include Amor y magia amorosa entre los Aztecas (Universidad Autónoma de México, 1984).

María Helena Sanchez Ortega, profesora titular of medieval and early modern history in the Universidad Nacional de Educación á Distancia, Madrid, has written extensively on sexuality in Spain and the Spanish gypsies, including Los gitanos españoles: El período borbónico (Castellote, 1977), and La Inquisición y los gitanos (Taurus, 1988). Her study, La mujer y la sexualidad en el antiguo régimen is in press.

Joseph H. Silverman was Professor of Spanish in the Adlai E. Stevenson College at the University of California at Santa Cruz before his recent death. He published many scholarly works on the literature of Golden Age Spain, including articles on the picaresque novel and Cervantes. Most recently, he published an edition of the folk literature of the Sephardic Jews (University of California Press, 1991), with Samuel G. Armistead and Israel J. Katz.


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CONTRIBUTORS
 

Preferred Citation: Perry, Mary Elizabeth, and Anne J. Cruz, editors Cultural Encounters: The Impact of the Inquisition in Spain and the New World. Berkeley:  University of California Press,  c1991 1991. http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft396nb1w0/