ABSTRACT

This chapter explores the European origins of missionary masculinity and the affective reasons behind the phenomenal growth of the Jesuit order. It pays particular attention to the reimagined clerical masculinity that the founding father Ignatius of Loyola modeled for and generated in other men across Europe, notably in German lands. Two media of male mimesis are especially relevant: Ignatius’s so-called Autobiography and his Spiritual Exercises. Ignatian manhood lent itself to participation in European expansion due to its global orientation, high mobility, and emphasis on patri-filial ties. Jesuit masculinity made ample room for the feminine on the level of the symbolic and the affective but established firm boundaries with actual women through women’s de jure exclusion from the all-male Society of Jesus.