Darrera modificació: 2017-03-16 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Gordon, Bruce - Marshall, Peter (eds.), The Place of the Dead: Death and Remembrance in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2000, 340 pp.
- Resum
- This volume of essays provides a comprehensive treatment of a very significant component of the societies of late medieval and early modern Europe: the dead. It argues that to contemporaries the 'placing' of the dead, in physical, spiritual and social terms, was a vitally important exercise, and one which often involved conflict and complex negotiation. The contributions range widely geographically, from Scotland to Transylvania, and address a spectrum of themes: attitudes towards the corpse, patterns of burial, forms of commemoration, the treatment of dead infants, the nature of the afterlife and ghosts. Individually the essays help to illuminate several current historiographical concerns: the significance of the Black Death, the impact of the protestant and catholic Reformations, and interactions between 'elite' and 'popular' culture. Collectively, by exploring the social and cultural meanings of attitudes towards the dead, they provide insight into the way these past societies understood themselves.
· A comprehensive treatment of the subject of 'placing' the dead - an original and exciting field of study in European cultural and religious history · Contains original case-studies by a team of leading scholars who write across a broad spectrum of thematic and geographical material · A general editorial introduction places the individual case-studies in contex
- Matèries
- Medicina - Pesta i altres malalties
Societat
- Notes
- Contents:
1. Introduction: placing the dead in late medieval and early modern Europe: Bruce Gordon and Peter Marshall
2. The place of the dead in Flanders and Tuscany: towards a comparative history of the Black Death: Samuel K. Cohn Jr: bib22914
3. 'Longing to be prayed for': death and commemoration in an English parish in the later Middle Ages: Clive Burgess
4. Spirits seeking bodies: death, posession and communal memory in the Middle Ages Nancy Caciola; 5. Malevolent ghosts and ministering angels: apparitions and pastoral care in the Swiss Reformation: Bruce Gordon
6. 'The map of God's word': geographies of the afterlife in Tudor and early Stuart England: Peter Marshall
7. Contesting sacred space: burial disputes in sixteenth-century France: Penny Roberts
8. 'Defyle not Christ's kirk with your carrion': burial and the development of burial aisles in post-Reformation Scotland: Andrew Spicer
9. Whose body? A study of attitudes towards the dead body in early modern Paris: Vanessa Harding
10. Women, memory and will-making in Elizabethan England: J. S. W. Helt
11. Death, prophecy and judgement in Transylvania: Graeme Murdock
12. Funeral sermons and orations as religious propaganda in sixteenth-century France: Larissa Juliet Taylor
13. The worst death becomes a good death: the passion of Don Rodrigo Calderón: James M. Boyden
14. Tokens of innocence: infant baptism, death and burial in early modern England: Will Coster
15. The afterlives of monstrous infants in Reformation Germany: Philip M. Soergel
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