Abstract

Despite the vast research done by contemporary historians concerning the history of sexuality, relatively little is known about gender and sexual identities in what is now Latin America. Much of what is known has been altered by the experiences and backgrounds of historians in this field, leading to interpretations which are either dismayingly negative or wholly positive. Some publications focus more on inference than fact, or ignore much of the context for why homosexuality and non-binary gender identity were treated as they were by Spanish colonists and conquistadors. This paper aims to construct a more complete analysis of sodomy throughout the history of colonial Latin America by comparing existing discourses regarding sodomy in colonial Latin America, as well as a few select colonial documents and court cases. An evaluation of this documentation reveals that the nature of sodomy in Spanish America is too complicated to describe in a binary manner. Authority did not always condemn homosexuality outright, and though most criollos were not for same-sex relations, some had more neutral feelings towards homosexual desires. This anaylsis adds to the growing body of research regarding American sexuality before and after European ideology altered continental perspectives. In using publications with varying perspectives, the role of male homosexuality, the perception of sodomy, the culture of honour in regards to sodomy, and the consequences of same-sex desire in Spain's American colonies can be better understood.

Highlights

  • When the Spanish arrived in the New World and wrote of their conquests, gruesome imagery was shared in a concentrated effort to vilify the indigenous populations

  • Sodomy especially stood out as many, if not all, indigenous Latin American societies had a role for same-sex eroticism

  • This paper will demonstrate the roles of male homosexuality prior to and during Spanish imperialism, how sodomy was perceived throughout the history of Latin America, the culture of honour in regards to homosexuality, and the consequences of male same-sex desire in Spain’s American colonies

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Summary

Introduction

When the Spanish arrived in the New World and wrote of their conquests, gruesome imagery was shared in a concentrated effort to vilify the indigenous populations. Sodomitical Butterflies: Male Homosexual Desire in Colonial Latin America

Results
Conclusion

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