توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Judging Faith, Punishing Sin: Inquisitions and Consistories in the Early Modern World
نام کتاب : Judging Faith, Punishing Sin: Inquisitions and Consistories in the Early Modern World
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : قضاوت ایمان، مجازات گناه: تفتیش عقاید و بررسی ها در دنیای اولیه مدرن
سری :
نویسندگان : Charles H. Parker, Gretchen Starr-LeBeau
ناشر : Cambridge University Press
سال نشر : 2017
تعداد صفحات : 414
ISBN (شابک) : 1107140242 , 9781107140240
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 5 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Half-title
Title page
Copyright information
Table of contents
List of Maps
List of Tables
List of Contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Notes
Part I Institutional Contexts and Operations
Section A Local Contexts and Regional Variations
1 Consistories
Notes
2 Inquisitions
Notes
Section B Tribunals and Jurisdictions
3 Consistories
Personnel
Jurisdiction
Lay Prosecution
Penalties
Notes
4 Inquisitions
Inquisition as a Legal Practice
Jurisdiction
Procedures
Torture
Penalties
Notes
5 Consistories and Civil Authorities
Notes
6 Episcopal Courts in Iberia, Italy, and Latin America
Notes
7 Church Courts in England
English Church Courts around 1500
The Impact of the Reformation
The English Inquisition?
Visitations
Experiments in Congregational Discipline
The Reformation of Penance
Relations with the Secular Courts
Courts, Clergy, and Communities in Jacobean England
Crisis and Collapse
The Church Courts in the Long Eighteenth Century
Notes
Section C Judges and Shepherds
8 Consistories
Notes
9 Inquisitions
Personnel
Inquisitors - Spanish, Portuguese, Roman
Re-envisioning Inquisitors
Notes
Section D Inquisition and Consistory Records
10 Consistories
An Uncertain Record
Registration Procedures and Distortions of Information
The Narrative Dimension of the Records
Notes
11 Inquisitions
The Sources of Early Modern Inquisitions
The Logic of the Inquisition
The Stories of the Accused
Conclusion
Notes
Part II Consistories and Inquisitions in Action
Section E Programs of Moral and Religious Reform
12 Consistories
The Grid of Ecclesiastical Space
Moral Reformation through Charity
Moral Reformation of the Church
Moral Reformation of Society
Conclusions
Notes
13 Inquisitions
Building Behavior, Introducing Suspicion into Consciences
The Politics of Presence and Exemplarity
Was Inquisitorial Action Efficacious?
Notes
Section F Victims as Actors
14 Consistories
Notes
15 Inquisitions
Notes
Section G Negotiating Penance
16 Consistories
Negotiating Consistories
Negotiating Penance?
Negotiating with Church Members
Negotiating Communal Harmony
Notes
17 Inquisitions
Inquisitors’ Attempts at Instilling Fear and Repentance, and Community Resistance to Them
Unorthodox and Negotiated Dealings with the Accused to Induce or Extort a Confession
Negotiating Penance in the Audience Chamber
Consultants, Votos, and Negotiating the Final Sentence
Notes
Section H Gender on Trial: Attitudes toward Femininity and Masculinity
18 Consistories
Notes
19 Inquisitions
Notes
Part III Ecclesiastical Discipline’s Expanding Reach and Decline
Section I Disciplinary Institutions in the Atlantic World
20 Consistories
Dutch Brazil
New Netherland
Surinam
Notes
21 Inquisitions
Controlling the Empire: Indians, Lutherans, and New Christians
Race, Gender, and the American Tribunals
Section J Disciplinary Institutions in an Asian Environment
22 Consistories
Consistorial Discipline in Batavia
Observing and Supervising the Church Districts of Batavia
Sins and Sinners
Sins in a Colonial Social Context
Catechism and Social Control
Conclusions
Notes
23 Inquisitions
Notes
Section K The Endgame: The Decline of Institutional Correction
24 Consistories
Penance, Punishment, and Honor
Public Penitence between Spiritual and Secular Discipline
Spiritual Jurisdiction
An Endgame? Suggestions for Further Research
25 Inquisitions
Italian Inquisitions
Crisis, Reform, and Reinvention of the Iberian Inquisitions
Iberian Institutions Divided Against Themselves
The End Game
Survival of the Roman Inquisition
Conclusion
Notes
Conclusion: Reformations of Penance and Scholarly Renascences of Disciplinary Institutions
Protestant and Catholic Reformations of Penance
‘‘Renaissances’’ of Inquisitorial and Consistorial Studies
Notes
Bibliography
General Works (Consulted in multiple chapters)
Introduction
Section A: Chapters 1 and 2
Section B: Chapters 3 through 7
Section C: Chapters 8 and 9
Section D: Chapters 10 and 11
Section E: Chapters 12 and 13
Section F: Chapters 14 and 15
Section G: Chapters 16 and 17
Section H: Chapters 18 and 19
Section I: Chapters 20 and 21
Section J: Chapters 22 and 23
Section K: Chapters 24 and 25
Conclusion
Index