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This compelling collection examines the 'lived devotion' of men and women in England's Long Reformation. Through cutting-edge research, fourteen chapters explore how English piety was at once segregational and social, fixed in principle yet fluid in practice, and where authors worked out their faith in painstaking and sometimes painful ways.
List of contents
Foreword - John Coffey
Introduction - Elizabeth Clarke and Robert W. Daniel
SECTION I: SITESPart I: Devotional identities in religious communities 1 What was devotional writing? Re-visiting the community at Little Gidding, 1626-33 - David Manning
2 'HERSCHEPT HET HERT': Katherine Sutton's
Experiences (1663), the printer's device and the making of devotion - Michael Durrant
Part II: Devotional identities in the household3 'A soul preaching to itself': sermon note-taking and family piety - Ann Hughes
4 The Act of Toleration, household worship and voicing dissent: Oliver Heywood's
A Family Altar (1693) - William J. Sheils
Part III: Devotional identities in the theatre5 Devotional identity and the mother's legacy in
A Warning for Fair Women (1599) - Iman Sheeha
6 Devotion, marriage, and mirth in
The Puritan Widow (1607) - Robert O. Yates
Part IV: Devotional identities in the prison7 'O this dark dungeon!': murderers, martyrs and the 'sacred space' of the early modern prison - Lynn Robson
8 Editing devotional identity: the compilation and reception of the prison prose of George Fox's
Journal (1694) - Catie Gill
SECTION II: TYPES Part V: Devotional identities in spiritual autobiographies9 Fathers and sons, conscience and duty in early modern England - Bernard Capp
10 Dissenting devotion and identity in
The Experience of Mary Franklin (
d. 1711) - Vera J. Camden
Part VI: Devotional identities in religious poetry11 Loyalist and dissenting responses to George Herbert's
The Temple (1633) in the devotional writing of the 1640s-50s - Jenna Townend
12 'Whom I never knew to Poetrize but now': grief and passion in the devotional poetry of Richard Baxter - Sylvia Brown
Part VII: Devotional identities in the ars moriendi13 'My sick-bed covenants': scriptural patterns and model piety in the early modern sickchamber - Robert W. Daniel
14 'Now the Lord hath made me a spectacle': deathbed narratives and devotional identities in the early seventeenth century - Charles Green
Afterword - N. H. Keeble
Index
About the author
Elizabeth Clarke is Professor Emeritus in English and Comparative Literary Studies at the University of Warwick
Robert W. Daniel is Associate Tutor in English at the University of Warwick
Summary
This compelling collection examines the ‘lived devotion’ of men and women in England’s Long Reformation. Through cutting-edge research, fourteen chapters explore how English piety was at once segregational and social, fixed in principle yet fluid in practice, and where authors worked out their faith in painstaking and sometimes painful ways. -- .