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The Trial of Joan of Arc
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 268

The Trial of Joan of Arc

No account is more critical to our understanding of Joan of Arc than the contemporary record of her 1431 trial. The record, which sometimes preserves Joan's very words, unveils her life, character, visions, and motives in fascinating detail. This new translation, the first in 50 years, is based on the full record of the trial proceedings in Latin.

Authorship and Publicity Before Print
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 349

Authorship and Publicity Before Print

Widely recognized by contemporaries as the most powerful theologian of his generation, Jean Gerson (1363-1429) dominated the stage of western Europe during a time of plague, fratricidal war, and religious schism. Yet modern scholarship has struggled to define Gerson's place in history, even as it searches for a compelling narrative to tell the story of his era. Daniel Hobbins argues for a new understanding of Gerson as a man of letters actively managing the publication of his works in a period of rapid expansion in written culture. More broadly, Hobbins casts Gerson as a mirror of the complex cultural and intellectual shifts of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. In contrast to earlier t...

A Companion to Jean Gerson
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 459

A Companion to Jean Gerson

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2018-11-12
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  • Publisher: BRILL

This guide to the life and writings of Jean Gerson (1363-1429) provides the reader with a state-of-the-art evaluation of the place of this central theologian and church reformer in the transition from medieval to early modern culture, spirituality and religion.

Printing, Power, and Piety
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 247

Printing, Power, and Piety

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2012-08-27
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  • Publisher: BRILL

This project examines the important implications of printed vernacular appeals to a nascent public by the reformer William Tyndale, by religious conservatives such as Thomas More, and by Henry VIII’s regime in the volatile early years of the English Reformation. The book explores the nature of this public (materially and as a discursive concept) and the various ways in which Tyndale provoked and justified public discussion of the central religious issues of his day. Tyndale’s writings raised important issues of authority and legitimacy and challenged many of the traditional notions of hierarchy at the heart of early modern European society. This study analyzes how this challenge manifested itself in Tyndale’s ecclesiology and his political theology.

Fictive Orders and Feminine Religious Identities, 1200-1600
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 216

Fictive Orders and Feminine Religious Identities, 1200-1600

Fictive Orders and Feminine Religious Identities traces the story of pious laywomen in Europe from the thirteenth to sixteenth centuries, examining the ways these women were active and engaged in their social and intellectual worlds, while also tracing the formation of modern perceptions about gender roles and the reasons why they persisted.

Schooling, Human Capital and Civilization
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 276

Schooling, Human Capital and Civilization

This book explores the formation of human capital in education, interrogating its social and ethical implications, and examining its role in generating policies and practices that govern curriculum studies as an academic field. Using an inquiry approach and offering an intellectual history of human capital theory through a genealogical methodology, the author begins by contextualizing the formation of the theory and explores its correlation with the history of imperialism. Tracing the concept of human capital from ancient slave societies to colonial empires, the book arrives at the modern formulations of the concept in education systems and explores its impact on curriculum and pedagogy in t...

Generations of Feeling
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 389

Generations of Feeling

An exploration of emotional life in the West, considering the varieties, transformations and constants of human emotions over eleven centuries.

Catechesis in the Later Middle Ages I
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 420

Catechesis in the Later Middle Ages I

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015-01-08
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  • Publisher: BRILL

In Catechesis in the Later Middle Ages I: The Exposition of the Lord's Prayer of Jordan of Quedlinburg, OESA (d. 1380)—Introduction, Text, and Translation, E.L. Saak presents the first edition and translation of the Exposition of the Lord's Prayer by the fourteenth-century Augustinian hermit, Jordan of Quedlinburg. This work, the first of six planned volumes of Jordan's Opera Selecta, contributes to our understanding of late medieval catechesis by focusing on a major pillar thereof, namely, the Pater Noster, bringing to light the importance of the Lord's Prayer to late medieval religion and the impact of Jordan's text on later authors, contributing thereby as well to the understanding of the emergence of the Catechism in the Reformation.

Martha Graham's Cold War
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 497

Martha Graham's Cold War

Revision of author's thesis (doctoral)--Columbia University, 2013, titled Strange commodity of cultural exchange: Martha Graham and the State Department on tour, 1955-1987.

Humanistica Lovaniensia
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 572

Humanistica Lovaniensia

Volume 50