Heinz, AnneliseAustin, Zahran2024-08-072024-08-072024-08-07https://hdl.handle.net/1794/29794The overall goal of this thesis is to expand the understanding of the role of gender in theSpanish colonization of the margins of northwestern New Spain as well as the historiographical conceptions which have previously restricted some aspects of this field of study. My sources include both published and unpublished documents, primarily centered around Hernando de Alarcón, Juan de Oñate, Pedro Fages, and Francisco Palóu. The main argument of the thesis is that the proper performance of masculinity was so important to the colonizing Spanish, including missionaries, settlers, and soldiers, that it shaped what they considered good governance, reasonable conduct, appropriate clothing, marriage practices, and sexual behavior. They used the actions of Indigenous people as a rhetorical foil both to make their own masculinity appear stronger and to mark Indigenous people as inferior and other on the grounds of their improper performance of Spanish gender norms.en-USAll Rights Reserved.Colonial Latin AmericaGenderSexualitySpanish EmpireDisrupting Colonial Binaries: Gender and Masculinity on the Northwestern Frontier of New Spain, 1540-1780Electronic Thesis or Dissertation