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Enlightenment and the Creation of German Catholicism

Enlightenment and the Creation of German Catholicism

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

Paperback / softback

£37.99

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
ISBN: 9780521181518
Number of Pages: 256
Published: 17/02/2011
Width: 15.2 cm
Height: 22.9 cm
This book tells the story of how eighteenth-century German Catholics rethought the Church. Educated German Catholics envisioned a Church that would solidify the link between religion, civilization, and morality. The first account of the German Catholic Enlightenment, this book explores the ways in which eighteenth-century Germans reconceived the relationship between religion, society, and the state. Seeking a balance between Germany and Rome, Catholic reformers desired a national Church that would enjoy a large measure of autonomy but would still be in communion with the universal Church. In trying to reform the Church, educated Catholics in the Holy Roman Empire questioned not only what it meant to be Catholic, but also what it meant to be German. In the process, they created German Catholicism. Arguing that German confessional identities were recast in the eighteenth century, this book forces a revision of our understanding of the German Enlightenment and its place in modern German history.
1. Introduction; Part I. Perfect Societies: Rethinking the Church and the State: 2. The liberty of the German church: Febronianism and the German Gallicans; 3. The German church and the absolute state; 4. Church and empire in the eighteenth century; 5. Collegialism: the rise of the state, and the redefinition of the church; Part II. The Universal Church and the University Class: 6. Catholic enlightenment and the search for a bourgeois Catholicism; 7. A program for reform; 8. Pastors of enlightenment: reforming the secular clergy; 9. Gallican longings: nation and religion in the German enlightenment; 10. Conclusion.

Michael Printy (Wesleyan University, Connecticut)

Review of the hardback: 'A scholarly and thoughtful contribution to an important but neglected topic.' Tim Blanning, University of Cambridge Review of the hardback: ''Catholic Enlightenment' is commonly seen as a contradiction in terms, and the unification of Germany as a victory of modernised, Protestant Prussia over archaic, Catholic Austria. In his highly original Enlightenment and the Creation of German Catholicism, based on ground-breaking study of little-known literature, Michael Printy overturns both of these commonplaces. He shows how in the German lands during the late eighteenth century Catholic clergy, lawyers and writers constructed a new rationale for their faith and their Church. They disowned its wealth, political power and obscurantism, associating it instead with many aspects of Enlightened thought and practice such as were to be found in progressive Catholic states. This tendency persisted into the nineteenth century, ensuring that there was Catholic as well as Protestant support for modernising and unifying Germany.' Derek Beales, Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge Review of the hardback: 'Printy demonstrates how important Catholicism and the Catholic Enlightenment was for the development of modern German national identity. This wide-ranging work reinterprets the dramatic remaking of German Catholicism as the old Reich collapsed and a new German nationalism was formed.' Marc Forster, Connecticut College Review of the hardback: 'Lucid, learned, and profoundly revisionist, Printy's book recasts our understanding of the history of German Catholicism. Printy shows that rather than following the Protestants, Catholic intellectuals of the German Enlightenment developed their own path to reform. In tension with Rome, and against the resistance of local hierarchies, this Catholic Enlightenment addressed the great questions of the day, including what it meant to be German. This was a Catholic Enlightenment that was open, serious, and viable, and it was brought down not by its inherent flaws, but by the impact of Napoleonic occupation. In a brilliant work of reconstruction, Printy rescues the achievement of the Catholic Enlightenment in Germany from the weight of subsequent events, which have for too long cast a shadow over it.' Helmut Walser Smith, Vanderbilt University 'Printy has added important substantiation to these efforts, in this, the first comprehensive examination of the subject in English. Part of his contribution in bringing balance to our understanding of the German Enlightenment and German nationalism is resurrecting, clarifying, and interpreting German Catholic writers who had slipped into obscurity ... Printy makes a persuasive case that Catholic intellectuals shared fully in the German Enlightenment and the rethinking of church and state in the late eighteenth century.' The Journal of Church History

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