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The purpose of this book is to provide an outlet for original research articles examining the role and value of religious and spiritual constructs across the social sciences. The aim of the series is to include an international and interfaith voice to this research dialogue. An effort is made to be interdisciplinary and academically eclectic. The articles in each volume represent a wide array of perspectives and research projects. Most of the articles report the findings of quantitative or qualitative investigations, but some deal with methodology, theory, or applications of social science studies in the field of religion, and some are applied, demonstrating the relevance of the social sciences to religious organizations and their clergy. The value of the volume is that it gives to researchers in this area a broad perspective on the issues and methods of religious research across a spectrum of academic disciplines. The aim of the book is to stimulate a creative, integrative dialogue that will enhance interdisciplinary research.
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Was there a women’s movement in the thirteenth century and is such a question meaningful in its medieval context? Far from being resolved, the issue of whether women had a thirteenth-century renaissance has still decisively to unsettle the periodization of Western European history in twelfth and sixteenth-century humanist renaissances. Herbert Grundmann long ago demonstrated the participation of women in the eremitically-inspired reforming movements of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and in the production of vernacular literature. Yet it is upon his work that this volume builds, for the diocese of Liège is the key area in this development. It was from Liège that Jacques de Vitry approached the papacy to secure permission for the women of the bishopric of Liège, France and Germany to live together and to promote holiness in each other by mutual example. The seventeen contributors to this volume examine not only the beguine religious life in the southern Low Countries, but also the impact of this movement on later medieval Sweden, England and France, the new modes of influence exerted by women in their religious lives, and the revivals of feminine spirituality in the late medieval West through to contemporary North America. Research does not yet allow for a whole new synthesis, but this volume directs scholars to detailed work on specific localities and persons, with an awareness of the problems and possibilities of wider European comparisons.
Feminist spirituality --- Women in Christianity --- -Spirituality --- Christianity --- History --- -Europe --- Council of Europe countries --- Eastern Hemisphere --- Eurasia --- Church history --- -Christian spirituality --- -History --- -Women in Christianity --- Feminist spirituality. --- Europe --- Belgique ; histoire du Moyen Age --- België ; geschiedenis van de Middeleeuwen --- Femmes --- Spiritualiteit --- Spiritualité --- Vrouwen --- Christian spirituality --- Mary of Oignies --- Beatrijs van Nazareth --- anno 500-1499 --- Belgium --- Sweden --- Great Britain --- Spirituality --- Women in Christianity - Europe - History - Middle Ages, 600-1500 --- Spiritualite --- Beguines --- Julienne du mont-cornillon (1192-1258) --- Liege (belgique) --- Moyen age --- Histoire 13e-15e siecles --- Vie religieuse --- Belgique --- Histoire --- Saints --- Reading habits --- Literature --- Religious communities --- Writers --- Images of women --- Book --- Relationship mother and daughter
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