Boston Priests, 1848-1910 : : A Study of Social and Intellectual Change / / Donna Merwick.

Donna Merwick rejects the usual assumption that Boston Catholicism is, definitively, Irish Catholicism. In her penetrating study of three distinct generations of Boston priests in the late nineteenth century, the author shows that Irish Catholicism met with steady opposition. Her account of the stru...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter HUP e-dition: American History eBook Package
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Place / Publishing House:Cambridge, MA : : Harvard University Press, , [2013]
©1973
Leto izdaje:2013
Izdaja:Reprint 2014
Jezik:English
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Fizični opis:1 online resource (276 p.)
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Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
Preface --
Introduction. 1866 as Vantage Point --
Chapter I. 1848 to 1866: “Varieties of Religious Experience” --
Chapter II. 1866 to 1880: Polarization --
Chapter III. 1880 to 1890: Drift, and Some Mastery --
Chapter IV. 1890 to 1910: New Sources and Functions of Authority --
INDEX TO ARCHIVAL REFERENCES --
Notes --
Bibliography --
Index
Izvleček:Donna Merwick rejects the usual assumption that Boston Catholicism is, definitively, Irish Catholicism. In her penetrating study of three distinct generations of Boston priests in the late nineteenth century, the author shows that Irish Catholicism met with steady opposition. Her account of the struggle of Boston clerics and intellectuals to relate their faith to their experiences in the changing city provides a new interpretation of Boston Catholic culture. In the 1840s Catholic influence in Boston was minimal and, therefore, accepted. The clergy, like other Bostonians, took pride in the city's history and colonial traditions. In measuring the impact of the massive Irish-Catholic immigration of the 1850s upon this first group of priests, the author traces in part the desperate efforts of Archbishop John J. Williams to maintain Boston's genteel traditions. The character of the clergy changed from the first generation, in which priests wrote novels and radical editorials, to a second generation, in which the influence of European Catholicism was strengthened. Immigrant priests and their Irish parishioners eventually outnumbered the Yankee Catholics, but they nevertheless failed to win genuine leadership in the diocese. A third group of priests, emerging in the 1890s under the leadership of Cardinal William O'Connell, displaced not only two generations of clergymen, but also two ways of life: one which sought to leave a legacy of admiration for the Boston Protestant heritage, and one which never understood Boston and tried to replace its cultural ways with something Irish, European, and Jansenistic. O'Connell, who had the Progressive's instinct for organization, imposed a kind of intellectual martial law on the clergy which discouraged, even punished, nonconformity. It is only at this point that it becomes reasonable to consider the traditional view that Boston Catholic thought is monolithic.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780674421073
9783110353464
9783110353488
9783110442212
DOI:10.4159/harvard.9780674421073
Dostop:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Donna Merwick.