A veritable tour de force. This book shatters cherished ideas about the early colonial period and does it in a style that is amusing but rigorous. It explodes the myth of the fearsome Inquisition and turns on its head the notion that Church and State worked hand-in-glove in a cozy relationship.
— Sonya Lipsett-Rivera, Carleton University, author of Gender and the Negotiation of Daily Life in Mexico, 1750–1856
This is a strikingly original account of the Spanish empire as it existed on the ground, rather than in decrees and treatises. Nesvig’s bold and convincing claims about the limits of imperial power are a major contribution to our understanding of the era. Rarely do histories of early Mexico seem so alive.
— Matthew D. O’Hara, University of California, Santa Cruz, author of A Flock Divided: Race, Religion, and Politics in Mexico, 1749–1857
New World historians and others have long recognized disparities between what was decreed by the Spanish Crown and what was actually carried out on the ground. In this book Nesvig substantiates what many of us have long suspected: distance and time allowed for some pretty nefarious characters to operate under the proverbial radar.
— SMRC Revista
Aptly Rabelaisian, dense, and intellectually rigorous…[Promiscuous Power] recontextualizes so many classics of New Spanish history, that this reader will never teach the history of the sixteenth century in the same way again.
— Estudious Interdisciplinarios de América Latina y el Caribe
Rarely does the nature of the sources match the voice of an author as it does in Nesvig's Promiscuous Power…I found Nesvig's stylistic and historiographical irreverence both refreshing and powerful.
— Not Even Past
Nesvig shows great knowledge of the literature and sources. The cleverly arranged book illuminates a whole array of—primarily religious—agents and factors that determined local rule [in New Spain]…[Promiscuous Power is a] well-written book which not only contains genuinely entertaining stories but also very important insights into the quotidian colonial struggle for power and survival.
— Journal of Social History
A welcome addition to the scholarship on colonial Mexico…The author's careful and detailed research reveals a debilitating rivalry between secular clerics and the religious orders, an Inquisition that fails to frighten most residents in the region, rural towns that sheltered convicted felons, and even priests who behaved more like caudillos than pious community leaders.
— American Historical Review
[Promiscuous Power] is a significant entry in the historiography dedicated to undoing the mythic imagery of a monolithic, overly centralized Spanish empire…this is an important book that makes the overtly optimistic see just how brutal, personal, and petty power can be...In our own era of decentralization and personalized expressions of power, Promiscuous Power is a book that resonates and disturbs.
— Sixteenth Century Journal
[Promiscuous Power] brings sixteenth-century Michoacán to life in a way that few others have done...Promiscuous Power succeeds in cramming a lot of lust, murder and ambition into its 200-odd pages. Part serious colonial history, part bodice-ripper, part paean to its geographical setting, it lays out a rich spread of colonial life that delights the reader on every page.
— Journal of Latin American Studies
[A] compelling and eminently readable study...Nesvig’s attention to narrative is one of the pleasures of the book. Always a fine writer, the author offers material worthy of Gabriel García Márquez...Nesvig renders his subjects in language that combines erudition and precision with utter vulgarity, all of it rooted in the sources (and translated with citations that make the author’s choices transparent and defensible)...Funny in passages, readable throughout, and a tragedy in the end, this book is a tour de force and a major contribution to our understanding of the individual decisions, passions, and rivalries that constituted colonial rule.
— Ethnohistory
This superb volume deserves a place on the short list of books on colonial Latin America that one can give undergraduates, graduate students, professional scholars, and nonacademic friends and expect each to derive both pleasure and profit from it...The writing throughout is excellent...Scholars of colonial Mexico, the Spanish empire, and comparative borderlands should read Promiscuous Power and assign it to students at all levels.
— Hispanic American Historical Review
Nesvig has written one of the most compelling and entertaining accounts yet on the tumultuous first decades of Spanish rule in Mexico. He shows how self-serving rogues and ruffians grabbed power in Michoacán and then dictated to the royal government and Catholic Church their terms for accepting outside authority.
— New Mexico Historical Review