A history of popular Christianity from the beginnings to the Enlightenment
Peter Howard
8 or 12 points
* One 2-hour seminar per week
* Second semester
*
Clayton
Objectives Students who successfully complete this subject will have an understanding of the methodologies and analytical problems associated with the study of a `popular culture and appreciate the richness and variety of religious practices as they have developed over the centuries. They will also grasp the ways in which the political and cultural map of Europe has been shaped at many levels by Christian devotions and thought.
Synopsis This subject is open to students of religion, history, and European studies. It examines assumptions about Catholic culture which inform contemporary understandings of Europe. What was the role of history-writing in the development of an identifiably Christian culture? What were the boundaries between magic, superstition, and orthodox religion? What was the meaning of martyrdom, the cult of the saints, shrines, and pilgrimage? What was the relationship between institutional religion and popular piety, high culture and popular expressions of devotion? How did preaching and education by friars function in local contexts? To what extent did specifically Christian teachings shape the cultural milieu of early modern Europe? There will be a particular emphasis on recent micro-historical studies (Brown, Ginzburg, Davis, Trexler, Christian) which attempt to explore the religious cosmology of ordinary folk.
Assessment A research essay (5000 words): 60%
* Examination (1
hour): 40%
* Additional assessment of 3000 words for students taking the
subject as a 12-point subject
Preliminary reading
Bossy J Christianity in the West 1400-1700 OUP, 1985
Herrin J The formation of Christendom Fontana, 1989
Recommended texts
Brown A D Popular piety in late medieval europe Clarendon, 1995
Brown P The rise of Christianity Blackwell, 1996
Delumeau J Catholicism between Luther and Voltaire: A new view of the Counter-Reformation Burns and Oates, 1977
Obelkevich J (ed.) Religion and the people 800-1700 U North Carolina P, 1979
von Greyerz K (ed.) Religion and society in early modern Europe 1500-1800 Allen and Unwin, 1984
Published by Monash University, Clayton, Victoria
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