Abstract
Scholars have long puzzled over the disproportionate role played by Judeo-conversos in the innovative cultural currents of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Spain. Recently, a number of scholars have developed the idea that outstanding converso thinkers and authors shared a sensibility that anticipated modernity (particularly Jewish modernity). One of the key features of this sensibility was subjective consciousness. This article explores the foundational work of Américo Castro on this subject. Drawing from nineteenth-century orientalist discourse, Castro understood the subjective awareness of conversos to be a renewed expression of ancient “semitic” characteristics discernable in medieval Jewish (and Islamic) writing, as well as in the Hebrew Bible. In Castro’s view, the conversos’ inherent access to their inner life, stimulated by their experience of repression, allowed them to create a literature that became synonymous with Hispanicity. Castro’s conversos, in whom the strongly negative characteristics of his Jews have “disappeared,” are thus harbingers not of modernity, but of a coalescing Spanish national identity. Yet his essentialized view of converso subjectivity has offered support to recent scholarship on “Marranism” and modernity, which follows Castro in its converso-centric apprehension of subjectivity in early modern Europe.
Highlights
*** The earliest scholar to try to make sense of a distinctive converso inclination to “subjectivity” was - to return to the subject of this essay - the Spanish philologist and thinker Américo Castro (1885-1972), who produced his work in exile, mostly at Princeton.10 His studies, culminating in the 1962 edition of his La realidad histórica de España, are cited frequently in the literature of “Marranism.” Yet Castro’s project was quite different in its aims and presuppositions from the recent “Marranism” scholarship
Scholars have long puzzled over the disproportionate role played by Judeo-conversos in the innovative cultural currents of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Spain
Can we ascertain, using accepted methods of historical inquiry, whether the conversos of early modern Spain had distinctive traits not found among “Old Christians” - even generations after the first ancestral conversion? Over many decades, a number of eminent scholars – most, but not all, of them Hispanists - have argued that conversos did exhibit unique traits and for that reason played a distinctive role in Spanish culture
Summary
*** The earliest scholar to try to make sense of a distinctive converso inclination to “subjectivity” was - to return to the subject of this essay - the Spanish philologist and thinker Américo Castro (1885-1972), who produced his work in exile, mostly at Princeton.10 His studies, culminating in the 1962 edition of his La realidad histórica de España, are cited frequently in the literature of “Marranism.” Yet Castro’s project was quite different in its aims and presuppositions from the recent “Marranism” scholarship.
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