What God Kept for Himself

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A01=Umberto Grassi
atheism history
Author_Umberto Grassi
blasphemy
carlo ginzburg
Category=NH
Category=NHB
Category=NHD
Category=NHDL
Category=QRAM1
Category=QRAM2
Category=QRAX
Category=QRM
Category=QRYA
censorship
counter-reformation
early modern italy
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
freethinking
giordano bruno
guido ruggiero
heresy
inquisition
intellectual history
italian humanism
italian renaissance
john boswell
libertinism
lucilio vanini
pietro aretino
religious dissent
religious nonconformity
religious persecution
religious repression
religious skepticism
religious tolerance
renaissance philosophy
renaissance sexuality
secular thought
sexual history
sodomy laws

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674302860
  • Weight: 512g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Feb 2026
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A revelatory account of sexual nonconformity and radical religious dissent in Renaissance Italy, drawing on never-before-studied Inquisition trials.

Between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries, a series of highly controversial Inquisition trials took place throughout the Italian peninsula. The defendants were all accused of the same heresy: claiming that Adam and Eve’s original sin had been committing sodomy, a “celestial” pleasure reserved for God alone. Such claims were not merely subversive sexual innuendo. Rather, they were the most radical expressions of a much broader critique—one that not only targeted repressive sexual taboos but also denounced the corruption of the Church, questioned the authority of the pope, and suggested that organized religion itself was a hoax designed to maintain elite power.

As Umberto Grassi shows, these dissenters’ beliefs about sexual freedom came to play a crucial role in the development of skeptical and atheistic positions. Many of the accused argued that, by violating God’s exclusive right to engage in sodomy, Adam and Eve dared to make themselves like gods. This view, which led to charges of atheism, radicalized a more widely held belief that the ruling classes banned sodomy to prevent the masses from enjoying it. In turn, such heresies fueled indictments of Christian morality as an all-too-human invention, whose purpose was to reinforce a social order in which the ruling classes controlled both sexuality and religious truth.

Tracing a radical tradition of thought on trial, What God Kept for Himself establishes the firm relationship between sexual nonconformity and religious dissent in the early modern Mediterranean world.

Umberto Grassi is an independent scholar based in Pisa, Italy. He is the author of Bathhouses and Riverbanks: Sodomy in a Renaissance Republic as well as the editor of Cursed Blessings: Sex and Religious Radical Dissent in Early Modern Europe and Mediterranean Crossings: Sexual Transgressions in Islam and Christianity.

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