Literature and Religious Culture in Seventeenth-Century England
Reid Barbour's 2002 study takes a fresh look at English Protestant culture in the reign of Charles I (1625–1649). In the decades leading into the civil war and the execution of their monarch, English writers explored the experience of a Protestant life of holiness, looking at it in terms of heroic endeavours, worship, the social order, and the cosmos. Barbour examines sermons and theological treatises to argue that Caroline religious culture comprises a rich and extensive stocktaking of the conditions in which Protestantism was celebrated, undercut, and experienced. Barbour argues that this stocktaking was also carried out in unusual and sometimes quite secular contexts; in the masques, plays and poetry of the era as well as in scientific works and diaries. This broad-ranging study offers an extensive appraisal of crucial seventeenth-century themes, and will be of interest to historians as well as literary scholars of the period.
- Examination of a vital period in the history of the English Reformation
- The book takes an interdisciplinary approach
- It offers an insight into Stuart literature
Reviews & endorsements
"Reid Barbour wrote the most serious and solid book on Literature and Religious Culture in Seventeenth Century England to be publisged in 2002." Studies in English Literature
"Reid Barbour's scholarly and engaging study of Caroline religious culture merits attention from historians and literary critics of the period...a fine work of scholarship." Renaissance Quarterly
"...one certainly derives from this book a powerful sense of the complexity and diversity of English religious culture of the 1620s to 1640s, and Barbour's rich accumulation of examples does ultimately convince." Sixteenth Century Journal
Product details
January 2005Adobe eBook Reader
9780511037177
0 pages
0kg
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction: spirit and circumstances in Caroline Protestantism
- 1. The church heroic: Charles, Laud, and Little Gidding
- 2. Great Tew and the skeptical hero
- 3. Between liturgy and dreams: the church fanciful
- 4. Respecting persons
- 5. Decorum and redemption in the theater of the person
- 6. Nature (I): Post-Baconian Mysteries
- 7. Nature (II): Church and Cosmos
- Conclusion: Rome, Massachusetts, and the Caroline Protestant imagination.