Religion, Space, and the Atlantic World

Religion, Space, and the Atlantic World

An interdisciplinary exploration of the influence of physical space in the study of religion

While the concept of an Atlantic world has been central to the work of historians for decades, the full implications of that spatial setting for the lives of religious people have received far less attention. In Religion, Space, and the Atlantic World, John Corrigan brings together research from geographers, anthropologists, literature scholars, historians, and religious studies specialists to explore some of the possibilities for and benefits of taking physical space more seriously in the study of religion.

Focusing on four domains that most readily reflect the importance of Atlantic world spaces for the shape and practice of religion (texts, design, distance, and civics), these essays explore subjects as varied as the siting of churches on the Peruvian Camino Real, the evolution of Hispanic cathedrals, Methodist identity in nineteenth-century Canada, and Lutherans in early eighteenth-century America. Such essays illustrate both how the organization of space was driven by religious interests and how religion adapted to spatial ordering and reordering initiated by other cultural authorities.

The case studies include the erasure of Native American sacred spaces by missionaries serving as cartographers, which contributed to a view of North America as a vast expanse of unmarked territory ripe for settlement. Spanish explorers and missionaries reorganized indigenous-built space to impress materially on people the "surveillance power" of Crown and Church. The new environment and culture often transformed old institutions, as in the reconception of the European cloister into a distinctly American space that offered autonomy and solidarity for religious women and served as a point of reference for social stability as convents assumed larger public roles in the outside community. Ultimately even the ocean was reconceptualized as space itself rather than as a connector defined by the land masses that it touched, requiring certain kinds of religious orientations—to both space and time—that differed markedly from those on land.

Collectively the contributors examine the locations and movement of people, ideas, texts, institutions, rituals, power, and status in and through space. They argue that just as the mental organization of our activity in the world and our recall of events have much to do with our experience of space, we should take seriously the degree to which that experience more broadly influences how we make sense of our lives.

  • Cover
  • RELIGION, SPACE, AND THE ATLANTIC WORLD
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • CONTENTS
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • PART ONE: MAPS
    • A Sea of Texts: The Atlantic World, Spatial Mapping, and Equiano’s Narrative
    • Clerics, Cartographers, and Kings: Mapping Power in the French Atlantic World, 1608–1752
    • Mapping Urban Religion in an Atlantic Port
  • PART TWO: DISTANCE
    • Missionary Time and Space: The Atlantic World in the Early Modern Age
    • Religious Community and Cross-Religious Communication beyond the Atlantic World: The Lost Tribes in the Americas and Mecca
    • The Religious Spaces of American Whaling
  • PART THREE: DESIGN
    • Spatial Hegemony and Evangelization: A Network-Based View of an Early Franciscan Doctrinal Settlement in Highland Peru
    • Stone Walls Do Not a Prison Make: French America’s Cosmopolitan Cloisters
    • Configuring and Reconfiguring Cathedral Space in the Spanish Atlantic: From Cathedral-Mosque to Baroque Machine
  • PART FOUR: IDENTITIES
    • Emigration, Transatlantic Communication, and Methodist Identity in Nineteenth-Century Ontario and Québec
    • Confessional Spaces and Religious Places: Lutherans in America, 1698–1748
    • Confessional Spatiality in the Puritan Atlantic
  • Notes
  • Contributors
  • Index