"Parables of Coercion is a fascinating and important work, participating in some of the most crucial conversations now taking place within Jewish and Islamic studies, as well as at the crossroads of Iberian and New World studies. While Kimmel’s book will be read eagerly by specialists in these fields, its impact will stretch far beyond, attracting a readership interested in how we became the kind of people we are today, in terms of religion, secularism, and modernity itself."
— Suzanne Conklin Akbari, University of Toronto
"This thoughtfully argued and innovative book deals with religious coercion and scholarly innovation. Abandoning the well-trodden path that erroneously renders Spanish forms and narratives of religious discipline only comprehensible as religious intolerance, Kimmel explores the relationship between debates about religion on the one hand and the conditions of knowledge production on the other. He focuses on the debates over the relationship between form and content, heresy of the heart and public orthodoxy of the tongue to show that it was not simply a theological or political issue. As Kimmel shows, the breach between public ritual and private faith corresponded to a second and more troubling chasm between word and meaning."
— Mercedes García-Arenal, Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales, Madrid
"Kimmel has written a fascinating study of the learned cultures built out of a century of Spanish Christian intolerance toward Islam, beginning with the coerced conversion of Spain's Muslims to Christianity in the early sixteenth century, to the expulsion of the Moriscos (as the converts and their descendants were called) in the early seventeenth. He shows us how the evolving 'Morisco question' animated the emergence of disciplines such as philology, history, theology, political theory, and economics. In the process, he provides us with an alternate and disquieting history of our own scholarly, political, and religious practices."
— David Nirenberg, University of Chicago
“Erudite and enlightening. . . . Highly recommended.”
— Choice
"Parables of Coercion is an ambitious book of great breadth and complexity."
— Journal of Jesuit Studies
"In Parables of Coercion Kimmel succeeds wonderfully in excavating the intersection of early modern Spanish socioreligious and intellectual history and in deciphering its various discourses....Kimmel further uncovers the dialectical relationship between socioreligious discord and innovative cultural production by religious intellectuals in seventeenth-century Spain, and in the process he manages brilliantly to render meaningless the conventional, simplistic characterization of early modern Spain as a purely intolerant society. It was far more complicated during the sixteenth century afterlife of Islamic Spain than historiographical orthodoxy suggests."
— Modern Philology
"Kimmel’s elegant arguments go a long way to offering alternatives to triumphalist or defeatist narratives and anachronistic paradigms that have dominated early modern Hispanic studies for decades."
— Hispanic Review
"Combining analytical perspectives of intellectual history and comparative literature, Seth Kimmel casts new light on the pastoral strategies and scholarly practices that theologians, church leaders, and crown officials mobilized to remove the 'danger' of heresy they associated with New Christians."
— MLN
"Ranging across canon law, sacred philology, and history in sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century Spain, Seth Kimmel aims to demonstrate how the phenomenon of Muslim converts to Christianity was entertained by experts in those disciplines, as well as the ways in which the Morisco question affected the disciplines themselves."
— Renaissance Quarterly
"Seth Kimmel’s compelling study offers an entirely new angle on the Morisco question, one which explores the relationships between coercion and conversion and religious reform and scholarly innovation."
— Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies
"Drawing together both more and less well-known figures and debates in insightful ways, Parables of Coercion vividly demonstrates the variety and range of early modern Spanish intellectual culture and thus offers a genuine contribution to the field."
— Speculum