Theopolitical Authorization: Óscar Romero, Far-Right Christianity, and a Contest for the Soul of the Americas
Kevin Coleman
University of Toronto
Date:ÌýWednesday, February 18, 2026
Time:Ìý3 - 5:30pm
Location:ÌýBoisi Center, 24 Quincy Road, Conference RoomÌýÌý
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Co-sponsored with The Institute for the Liberal Arts, The Jesuit Institute, and the Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences Dean's Office
This talk examines the assassination of Archbishop Óscar Romero and the subsequent contestation over his legacy as manifestations of a transnational theological and political struggle in and beyond Cold War El Salvador. Drawing on previously unexamined beatification documents, particularly theÌýPositio Super Martyrio, Coleman will reconstruct how conservative forces constructed theological justifications that portrayed Romero as a communist dupe rather than as an authentic religious authority. He will introduce the concept ofÌýtheopoliticalÌýdoppelgängersÌýto explain the mirroring through which Christian nationalists created permission structures for violence.
Kevin Coleman is an associate professor of history at the University of Toronto. A historian of capitalism, photography, and political conflict in modern Latin America, he is the author ofÌýA Camera in the Garden of EdenÌý(2016) and co-editor ofÌýCapitalism and the CameraÌý(2021) andÌýCoups d’état in Cold War Latin AmericaÌý(2025). He wrote and directedÌýStolen PhotoÌý(Señal Colombia, 2024), a documentary exploring the 1928 massacre of banana workers in Colombia. His research has been awarded prizes from the American Historical AssociationÌýand supported by the ACLS/Mellon Foundation and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.
