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Jesuits: Cultures, Sciences, and the Arts, 1540-1773 [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 792 pages, height x width x depth: 229x153x193 mm, weight: 1280 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Nov-2015
  • Izdevniecība: University of Toronto Press
  • ISBN-10: 1487520395
  • ISBN-13: 9781487520397
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  • Cena: 53,42 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 792 pages, height x width x depth: 229x153x193 mm, weight: 1280 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 06-Nov-2015
  • Izdevniecība: University of Toronto Press
  • ISBN-10: 1487520395
  • ISBN-13: 9781487520397

Recent years have seen scholars in a wide range of disciplines re-evaluate the history of the Society of Jesus. In 1997, a group of scholars convened a major international conference to discuss the world of the Jesuits between 1540 and 1773 (the year of its suppression by papal edict). This meeting led to the creation of the first volume in this series,The Jesuits, which examined the worldwide Jesuit undertaking in such fields as music, art, architecture, devotional writing, mathematics, physics, astronomy, natural history, public performance, and education, with special attention to the Jesuits' interaction with non-European cultures.

This second volume, following a second conference in 2002, continues in a similar path as its predecessor, complementing the regional coverage with contributions on the Flemish and Iberian provinces, on the missions in Japan, and in post-Suppression Russia and the United States. The performing arts, like theatre and music, are broadly treated, and, in addition to continued attention to painting and architecture, the volume contains essays on a range ofobjets d'art, including statuary, reliquaries, and alter pieces - as well as on gardens, mechanical clocks, and related automata. Other themes include finances, natural theology, censorship within the Jesuit order, and the Society's relationship to women.

Perhaps most important, the volume gives particular attention to the eighteenth century, the 'age of disasters' for the Jesuits - the negative papal ruling on Chinese Rites, the destruction the of Paraguay Reductions, and the suppressions of the order that began in Portugal and that culminated in the general Suppression of 1773. With contributions from distinguished scholars from a dozen different countries,The Jesuits, II continues in the illustrious tradition of its predecessor to make an important contribution to religious memory.



With contributions from distinguished scholars from a dozen different countries,The Jesuits, II continues in the illustrious tradition of its predecessor to make an important contribution to religious memory.

Recenzijas

A triumphalist volume and a triumphant one.

- Alison Shell (Times Literary Supplement) An important addition to the historiography of the Society of Jesus and the early modern world Should be ignored only at a scholars risk.

- Michael W. Maher, S.J. (Catholic Historical Review) The scope of the contributions is breathtaking.

- Thomas M. McCoog, S.J. (Journal of Ecclesiastical History) Combines cutting-edge scholarship with traditional concerns An excellent collection.

- Kathleen M. Comerford (Sixteenth Century Journal)

Papildus informācija

Winner of Alpha Sigma Nu National Book Award, Association of Jesuit Colleges & Universities 2002 (United States).'The geographical and disciplinary scope of The Jesuits is breathtaking. The quality of individual contributions is high, while the volume as a whole is more than the sum of its parts. It maintains a delicate balance between unity and diversity, showing that Jesuit contributions to the arts and sciences have a style of their own without being monolithically uniform. This is a book which redefines its field. It will be a landmark in Jesuit studies as well as an important contribution to the history of early modern culture.' -- Peter Burke, Emmanuel College, Cambridge University 'Cultural historians have been, with few exceptions, slow to appreciate the many cultural roles played by the Society of Jesus from its foundation onwards. These spectacularly learned, lively and wide-ranging essays begin the job. They follow the Jesuits into realms as apparently diverse as prayer and philology and into places as distant from one another as Prague and Paraguay. They reveal some of the extraordinary fertile research currently under way on every aspect of the Jesuit enterprise, from its historical origins to its effects on European political and cultural expansion. And though they shed a particularly bright new light on the histories of science, art, and architecture, they leave few segments of the early modern encyclopedia of the arts untouched.' -- Anthony Grafton, Princeton University 'Beyond the appeal that this book would have to a reader interested in specific items of Jesuit history, it would also have a wider readership among those interested in and/or conversant with the history of Europe from the late Renaissance through the Baroque period and on into the Age of Reason, in fields as varied as politics, literature, science, art, religion, and society. I thought that I knew a fair amount about Jesuitica; yet however much I may know, I have learned from this book much that I had not previously known at all.' -- John W. Padberg, S.J., Director, Institute of Jesuit Sources, St. Louis, Missouri
Acknowledgments ix
Contributors xi
Introduction xiii
Abbreviations xvii
PART ONE Refraining Jesuit History
1(130)
1 The Historiography of the Society of Jesus: Where Does It Stand Today?
3(35)
John W. O'Malley
2 `Le style jesuite n'existe pas': Jesuit Corporate Culture and the Visual Arts
38(52)
Gauvin Alexander Bailey
3 The Fertility and the Shortcomings of Renaissance Rhetoric: The Jesuit Case
90(17)
Marc Fumaroli
4 The Cultural Field of Jesuit Science
107(24)
Rivka Feldhay
PART TWO The Roman Scene
131(78)
5 Two Farnese Cardinals and the Question of Jesuit Taste
134(14)
Clare Robertson
6 Jesuit Thesis Prints and the Festive Academic Defence at the Collegio Romano
148(22)
Louise Rice
7 From `The Eyes of All' to `Usefull Quarries in philosophy and good literature': Consuming Jesuit Science, 1600-1665
170(20)
Michael John Gorman
8 Music History in the Musurgia universalis of Athanasius Kircher
190(19)
Margaret Murata
PART THREE Mobility: Overseas Missions and the Circulation of Culture
209(124)
9 Mapping Jesuit Science: The Role of Travel in the Geography of Knowledge
212(29)
Steven J. Harris
10 Jesuits, Jupiter's Satellites, and the Academie Royale des Sciences
241(17)
Florence Hsia
11 Exemplo aeque ut verbo: The French Jesuits' Missionary World
258(16)
Dominique Deslandres
12 East and West: Jesuit Art and Artists in Central Europe, and Central European Art in the Americas
274(31)
Thomas Dacosta Kaufmann
13 The Role of the Jesuits in the Transfer of Secular Baroque Culture to the Rio de la Plata Region
305(12)
Magnus Morner
14 Candide and a Boat
317(16)
T. Frank Kennedy
PART FOUR Encounters with the Other: Between Assimilation and Domination
333(106)
15 Alessandro Valignano: The Jesuits and Culture in the East
336(16)
Andrew C. Ross
16 Jesuit Corporate Culture As Shaped by the Chinese
352(12)
Nicolas Standaert
17 Translation as Cultural Reform: Jesuit Scholastic Psychology in the Transformation of the Confucian Discourse on Human Nature
364(16)
Qiong Zhang
18 The Truth-Showing Mirror: Jesuit Catechism and the Arts in Mughal India
380(22)
Gauvin Alexander Bailey
19 Roberto de Nobili's Dialogue on Eternal Life and an Early Jesuit Evaluation of Religion in South India
402(16)
Francis X. Clooney
20 The Jesuits and the Indigenous Peoples of the Philippines
418(21)
Rene B. Javellana
PART FIVE Tradition, Innovation, Accommodation
439(126)
21 Bernini's Image of the Ideal Christian Monarch
442(38)
Irving Lavin
22 Innovation and Assimilation: The Jesuit Contribution to Architectural Development in Portuguese India
480(25)
David M. Kowal
23 God's Good Taste: The Jesuit Aesthetics of Juan Bautista Villalpando in the Sixth and Tenth Centuries B.C.E.
505(17)
Jaime Lara
24 Jesuit Aristotelian Education: The De anima Commentaries
522(16)
Alison Simmons
25 Jesuit Physics in Eighteenth-Century Germany: Some Important Continuities
538(17)
Marcus Hellyer
26 The Jesuits and Polish Sarmatianism
555(10)
Stanislaw Obirek
PART SIX Conversion and Confirmation through Devotion and the Arts
565(134)
27 The Art of Salvation in Bavaria
568(32)
Jeffrey Chipps Smith
28 Henry Hawkins: A Jesuit Writer and Emblematist in Stuart England
600(27)
Karl Josef Holtgen
29 Jesuit Casuistry or Jesuit Spirituality? The Roots of Seventeenth-Century British Puritan Practical Divinity
627(14)
James F. Keenan
30 The Use of Music by the Jesuits in the Conversion of the Indigenous Peoples of Brazil
641(18)
Paulo Castagna
31 The Jesuits in Manila, 1581-1621: The Role of Music in Rite, Ritual, and Spectacle
659(21)
William J. Summers
32 Jesuit Devotions and Retablos in New Spain
680(19)
Clara Bargellini
PART SEVEN Reflections: What Have We Learned? Where Do We Go from Here?
699(18)
Joseph Connors
700(7)
Luce Giard
707(6)
Michael J. Buckley, S.J.
713(4)
Index 717
John W. O'Malley, S.J., is professor in the Department of Church History at the Weston Jesuit School of Theology.

Gauvin Alexander Bailey is an associate Professor in the Department of Visual and Performing Arts at Clark University.

Steven J. Harris is a professor at the Jesuit Institute, Boston College.

T. Frank Kennedy, S.J. is a professor in and chair of the Department of Music at Boston College.