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Monastery

A Study of Freedom, Love, and Community

Monastery

A Study of Freedom, Love, and Community

This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Hardback

£70.00

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN: 9780275941734
Number of Pages: 328
Published: 30/07/1992

Monasteries are one of the few types of communities that have been able to exist without the family. In this intimate, first-hand study of the daily life in a Trappist monastery, Hillery concludes that what binds this unusual and highly successful community together is its emphases on freedom and agape love. The Monastery reintegrates sociology with its allied disciplines in an attempt to understand the monastery on its own terms, and at the same time link that with sociology. Hillery delves into the history, the importance of the Rule of Benedict, the strictness of the Trappist interpretation, and the significance of the Second Vatican Council. Throughout, he uses a holistic anthropological approach.

The work begins with a detailed sociological analysis of freedom, love, and community. Other topics include ways in which candidates enter the monastery, their relation to their families, economic activities, politics, prayer, asceticism, recreation, illness, death, and deviance. Comparisons are made with nine of the other eleven Trappist monasteries in the United States. Anthropologists and sociologists, especially those interested in community, comparative analysis, and religion are challenged by The Monastery to move beyond the arbitrary limits they have placed on themselves, which maintain that all knowledge must be capable of being physically perceived and statistically measured.

Foreword Preface Beginning Introduction The Historical and Socological Context The Historical Context Freedom and Discipline (with Charles J. Dudley) Love and Community An Ethnographic Analysis The Guest House and the Novitiate Space and Interaction Family and Celibacy Earning a Living Authority and Government Stratification (with L. Richard Della Fave) Monastic Prayer Asceticism and Recreation Invalids and Death The Relativity of Deviance Conclusions Community, Freedom, and Love Ending: A Personal Summing Up Appendices Glossary References Index

George A. Hillery

GEORGE A. HILLERY, JR. is Professor of Sociology at Virginia Polytechnic and State University. He has spent forty years researching communities, and has published several studies on the topic, including A Research Odyssey: Developing and Testing a Community Theory and Communal Organizations: A Study of Local Societies.