How to Become a Jesuit Crypto-Jew: The Self-Confessionalization of Giovanni Battista Eliano through the Textual Artifice of Conversion

In his reflections on being the only Jewish-born Jesuit, Giovanni Battista Eliano (1530-89) deliberated over the nature of religious conversion. Early in his career, Eliano did not hide the difficulties and personal dilemmas that he and other converts faced. However, in the wake of increased institu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The sixteenth century journal
Main Author: Clines, Robert John 1984- (Author)
Format: Print Article
Language:English
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Published: Sixteenth Century Journal Publ. [2017]
In: The sixteenth century journal
RelBib Classification:AE Psychology of religion
BH Judaism
KAH Church history 1648-1913; modern history
KDB Roman Catholic Church
Further subjects:B Baptism Early works to 1800
B Catholic Identity History
B Crypto-Jews
B Jesuits Biography
B Christian converts from Judaism History
B Jesuits History 16th century
B CONVERSION (Religion)
Description
Summary:In his reflections on being the only Jewish-born Jesuit, Giovanni Battista Eliano (1530-89) deliberated over the nature of religious conversion. Early in his career, Eliano did not hide the difficulties and personal dilemmas that he and other converts faced. However, in the wake of increased institutional skepticism concerning conversion and the dedication of Jewish-lineage Jesuits, Eliano recast conversion from a lifelong process of belonging to an instantaneous act of becoming via baptism. This shift in how Eliano textually constructed conversion demonstrates that confessionalization was driven by more than religious consolidation via political and social institutions, but centered on a dialogic exchange between individuals and society that stimulated confession building. This dialogue, what I call self-confessionalization, allows for a more complex understanding of how confessional self-representation was in conversation with socioreligious dynamics, and is central to seeing confessionalization and cross-confessional encounters as evolutionary processes rather than static forms.
ISSN:0361-0160
Contains:Enthalten in: The sixteenth century journal