- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > History / World
Full Description
This is the first Handbook of the Reformations to include global Protestantism, and the most comprehensive Handbook on the development of Protestant practices which has been published so far. The volume brings together international scholars in the fields of theology, intellectual thought, and social and cultural history. Contributions focus on key themes, such as Martin Luther or the Swiss reformations, offering an up-to-date perspective on current scholarly debates, but they also address many new themes at the cutting edge of scholarship, with particularly emphasis on the history of emotions, the history of knowledge, and global history.
This new approach opens up fresh perspectives onto important questions: how did Protestant ways of conceiving the divine shape everyday life, ideas of the feminine or masculine, commercial practices, politics, notions of temporality, or violence? The aim of this Handbook is to bring to life the vitality of Reformation ideas. In these ways, the Handbook stresses that the Protestant Reformations in all their variety, and with their important "radical" wings, must be understood as one of the lasting long-term historical transformations which changed Europe and, subsequently, significant parts of the world.
Contents
1: Ulinka Rublack: Introduction
Part I: The New Theology
2: Christopher Ocker: Explaining Evil and Grace
3: Alec Ryrie: The Nature of Spiritual Experience
4: Robin Barnes: Reforming Time
5: Glenn Burgess: Political Obedience
Part II: Geographies and Varieties of the Reformations
6: Graeme Murdoch: Geographies of the Protestant Reformation
7: Howard Louthan: The Bohemian Reformations
8: Thomas Kaufmann: Luther and Lutheranism
9: Randolph Head: The Swiss Reformations: Movements, Settlements, and Re-Imagination, 1520-1720
10: C. Scott Dixon: The Radicals
11: Mack P. Holt: Calvin and Reformed Protestantism
12: Felicity Heal: The English, Scottish and Irish Reformations
13: Philip Soergel: Protestantism in the Age of Catholic Renewal
14: Andrew Gow & Jeremy Fradkin: Protestantism and non-Christian Religions
15: Howard Hotson: Outsiders, Dissenters and Competing Visions of Reform
16: Ulrike Gleixner: Pietism
17: Mark Häberlein: Protestantism Outside Europe
Part III: Communicating the Reformations
18: Andrew Pettegree: Print Workshops and Markets
19: Helmut Puff: The Word
20: Susan Karant Nunn: The Reformation of Liturgy
21: Mark Greengrass: An "Epistolary Reformation ": The Role and Significance of Letters in the First Century of the Protestant Reformation
Part IV: Sites, Institutions, and Society
22: Michael Heyd: University Scholars of the Reformation
23: Charlotte Methuen: Education and Understandings of Social Hierarchy
24: Joel Harrington: Legal Courts
25: Beat Kumin: Rural Society
26: Guido Marnef: Civic Religions
27: Ronald Asch: The European Nobilities and the Reformation
Part V: Identities and Cultural Meanings of the Reformations
28: Craig Koslofsky: Explaining Change
29: Bridget Heal: Visual and Material Culture
30: Christopher Boyd-Brown: Music
31: Herman Roodenburg: The Body in the Reformations
32: Kathleen M. Crowther: Sexual Difference
33: Ute Lotz-Heumann: The Natural and Supernatural
34: Christine R. Johnson: Commerce and Consumption
35: Alisha Rankin: Natural Philosophy
Part VI: Assessing the Reformations
36: Merry Wiesner-Hanks: Comparisons and Consequences in Global Perspective, 1500-1750
37: Bruce Gordon: History and Memory