Blood and Spirit : Paternity, Fraternity and Religious Self- fashioning in Luis de Carvajal's Spiritual Autobiography


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How to Cite

Perelis, R. (2012). Blood and Spirit : Paternity, Fraternity and Religious Self- fashioning in Luis de Carvajal’s Spiritual Autobiography. EIAL - Estudios Interdisciplinarios De América Latina Y El Caribe, 23(1), 77–98. https://doi.org/10.61490/eial.v23i1.304

Abstract

The subterranean networks of New World crypto-Judaism rarely thrived in
isolation. Rather, as Jonathan I. Israel, Yosef Kaplan, and others have shown,
these secret Jewish communities were connected to a global network of fel- low Conversos and openly professing Jews living throughout Europe and the Americas.2 These disparate groups were connected through a complex web of familial, economic, and cultural ties. Commercial links were solidified through marriage; therefore, business and family were inseparable. Real-world family connections made of “blood and treasure” were intertwined with a longing for family in metaphorical and spiritual terms. Beyond the bonds of flesh and blood, individual crypto-Jews found paternity and brotherhood with like-minded re- ligious searchers for a family of spirit inseparably connected with their family of flesh and blood. This paper explores the dialectical relationship between the socio-economic iteration of family and its more spiritual, metaphorical expres-sion within the context of New World crypto-Judaism.
https://doi.org/10.61490/eial.v23i1.304
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