Between Orders and Heresy
Rethinking Medieval Religious Movements
Herausgeber: Deane, Jennifer Kolpacoff; Lester, Anne E
Between Orders and Heresy
Rethinking Medieval Religious Movements
Herausgeber: Deane, Jennifer Kolpacoff; Lester, Anne E
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Between Orders and Heresy suggests new ways of thinking about the modes of religious life that characterized the medieval religious experience.
Between Orders and Heresy suggests new ways of thinking about the modes of religious life that characterized the medieval religious experience.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 430
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Juni 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 159mm x 34mm
- Gewicht: 824g
- ISBN-13: 9781487502416
- ISBN-10: 1487502419
- Artikelnr.: 62852737
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 430
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Juni 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 159mm x 34mm
- Gewicht: 824g
- ISBN-13: 9781487502416
- ISBN-10: 1487502419
- Artikelnr.: 62852737
Edited by Jennifer Kolpacoff Deane and Anne E. Lester
List of Illustrations
Preface
John Van Engen
1. Introduction: Religion and Religious Worlds in Between
Jennifer Kolpacoff Deane, University of Minnesota Morris, and Anne E.
Lester, Johns Hopkins University
2. Herbert Grundmann: Confession and the "Religious Movements"
Letha Böhringer, Universität zu Köln
3. Francis of Assisi, the Vita Apostolica, and the Roman Church: Rethinking
the Paradigms
Amanda Power, University of Oxford
4. Hypocrites! Critiques of Religious Movements and Criticism of the
Church, 1050-1300
Sita Steckel, University of Münster
5. Crusading as a Religious Movement: Families, Community, and Lordship in
a Vernacular Frame
Anne E. Lester, Johns Hopkins University
6. Coming Together as an Apostolic Act: Confraternalism as an Umbrella for
Medieval Religious Movements
Neslihan ¿enocak, Columbia University
7. Reassessing the Links between "The Women’s Religious Movement" and "The
Origins of a Religious Literature in the Vernacular" in France
Sean L. Field, University of Vermont
8. "More Useful in the Salvation of Others": Beguines, Religio, and the
Cura Mulierum at the Early Sorbonne
Tanya Stabler Miller, Loyola University, Chicago
9. Between Charity and Controversy: The Grey Sisters, Liminality, and the
Religious Life
Alison More, College of New Rochelle
10. Women, Power, and Religious Dissent: Why Women Never became Heresiarchs
Janine Larmon Peterson, Maurist University
11. Navigating Saintly Circles: Margherita Colonna and the Women’s
Religious Movement in Rome
Lezlie Knox, Marquette University
12. The "Clever Girls" of Prague: Beguines, Preachers, and Late Medieval
Bohemian Religion
Jana Grollová
Bibliography
Index
Preface
John Van Engen
1. Introduction: Religion and Religious Worlds in Between
Jennifer Kolpacoff Deane, University of Minnesota Morris, and Anne E.
Lester, Johns Hopkins University
2. Herbert Grundmann: Confession and the "Religious Movements"
Letha Böhringer, Universität zu Köln
3. Francis of Assisi, the Vita Apostolica, and the Roman Church: Rethinking
the Paradigms
Amanda Power, University of Oxford
4. Hypocrites! Critiques of Religious Movements and Criticism of the
Church, 1050-1300
Sita Steckel, University of Münster
5. Crusading as a Religious Movement: Families, Community, and Lordship in
a Vernacular Frame
Anne E. Lester, Johns Hopkins University
6. Coming Together as an Apostolic Act: Confraternalism as an Umbrella for
Medieval Religious Movements
Neslihan ¿enocak, Columbia University
7. Reassessing the Links between "The Women’s Religious Movement" and "The
Origins of a Religious Literature in the Vernacular" in France
Sean L. Field, University of Vermont
8. "More Useful in the Salvation of Others": Beguines, Religio, and the
Cura Mulierum at the Early Sorbonne
Tanya Stabler Miller, Loyola University, Chicago
9. Between Charity and Controversy: The Grey Sisters, Liminality, and the
Religious Life
Alison More, College of New Rochelle
10. Women, Power, and Religious Dissent: Why Women Never became Heresiarchs
Janine Larmon Peterson, Maurist University
11. Navigating Saintly Circles: Margherita Colonna and the Women’s
Religious Movement in Rome
Lezlie Knox, Marquette University
12. The "Clever Girls" of Prague: Beguines, Preachers, and Late Medieval
Bohemian Religion
Jana Grollová
Bibliography
Index
List of Illustrations
Preface
John Van Engen
1. Introduction: Religion and Religious Worlds in Between
Jennifer Kolpacoff Deane, University of Minnesota Morris, and Anne E.
Lester, Johns Hopkins University
2. Herbert Grundmann: Confession and the "Religious Movements"
Letha Böhringer, Universität zu Köln
3. Francis of Assisi, the Vita Apostolica, and the Roman Church: Rethinking
the Paradigms
Amanda Power, University of Oxford
4. Hypocrites! Critiques of Religious Movements and Criticism of the
Church, 1050-1300
Sita Steckel, University of Münster
5. Crusading as a Religious Movement: Families, Community, and Lordship in
a Vernacular Frame
Anne E. Lester, Johns Hopkins University
6. Coming Together as an Apostolic Act: Confraternalism as an Umbrella for
Medieval Religious Movements
Neslihan ¿enocak, Columbia University
7. Reassessing the Links between "The Women’s Religious Movement" and "The
Origins of a Religious Literature in the Vernacular" in France
Sean L. Field, University of Vermont
8. "More Useful in the Salvation of Others": Beguines, Religio, and the
Cura Mulierum at the Early Sorbonne
Tanya Stabler Miller, Loyola University, Chicago
9. Between Charity and Controversy: The Grey Sisters, Liminality, and the
Religious Life
Alison More, College of New Rochelle
10. Women, Power, and Religious Dissent: Why Women Never became Heresiarchs
Janine Larmon Peterson, Maurist University
11. Navigating Saintly Circles: Margherita Colonna and the Women’s
Religious Movement in Rome
Lezlie Knox, Marquette University
12. The "Clever Girls" of Prague: Beguines, Preachers, and Late Medieval
Bohemian Religion
Jana Grollová
Bibliography
Index
Preface
John Van Engen
1. Introduction: Religion and Religious Worlds in Between
Jennifer Kolpacoff Deane, University of Minnesota Morris, and Anne E.
Lester, Johns Hopkins University
2. Herbert Grundmann: Confession and the "Religious Movements"
Letha Böhringer, Universität zu Köln
3. Francis of Assisi, the Vita Apostolica, and the Roman Church: Rethinking
the Paradigms
Amanda Power, University of Oxford
4. Hypocrites! Critiques of Religious Movements and Criticism of the
Church, 1050-1300
Sita Steckel, University of Münster
5. Crusading as a Religious Movement: Families, Community, and Lordship in
a Vernacular Frame
Anne E. Lester, Johns Hopkins University
6. Coming Together as an Apostolic Act: Confraternalism as an Umbrella for
Medieval Religious Movements
Neslihan ¿enocak, Columbia University
7. Reassessing the Links between "The Women’s Religious Movement" and "The
Origins of a Religious Literature in the Vernacular" in France
Sean L. Field, University of Vermont
8. "More Useful in the Salvation of Others": Beguines, Religio, and the
Cura Mulierum at the Early Sorbonne
Tanya Stabler Miller, Loyola University, Chicago
9. Between Charity and Controversy: The Grey Sisters, Liminality, and the
Religious Life
Alison More, College of New Rochelle
10. Women, Power, and Religious Dissent: Why Women Never became Heresiarchs
Janine Larmon Peterson, Maurist University
11. Navigating Saintly Circles: Margherita Colonna and the Women’s
Religious Movement in Rome
Lezlie Knox, Marquette University
12. The "Clever Girls" of Prague: Beguines, Preachers, and Late Medieval
Bohemian Religion
Jana Grollová
Bibliography
Index