Becoming a New Self: Practices of Belief in Early Modern Catholicism

Becoming a New Self: Practices of Belief in Early Modern Catholicism

by Moshe Sluhovsky
Becoming a New Self: Practices of Belief in Early Modern Catholicism

Becoming a New Self: Practices of Belief in Early Modern Catholicism

by Moshe Sluhovsky

Hardcover

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Overview

In Becoming a New Self, Moshe Sluhovsky examines the diffusion of spiritual practices among lay Catholics in early modern Europe. By offering a close examination of early modern Catholic penitential and meditative techniques, Sluhovsky makes the case that these practices promoted the idea of achieving a new self through the knowing of oneself.

Practices such as the examination of conscience, general confession, and spiritual exercises, which until the 1400s had been restricted to monastic elites, breached the walls of monasteries in the period that followed. Thanks in large part to Franciscans and Jesuits, lay urban elites—both men and women—gained access to spiritual practices whose goal was to enhance belief and create new selves. Using Michel Foucault’s writing on the hermeneutics of the self, and the French philosopher’s intuition that the early modern period was a moment of transition in the configurations of the self, Sluhovsky offers a broad panorama of spiritual and devotional techniques of self-formation and subjectivation.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226472850
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 10/12/2017
Pages: 232
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Moshe Sluhovsky is the Paulette and Claude Kelman Chair in the Study of French Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is the author, among other books, of Believe Not Every Spirit: Possession, Mysticism and Discernment in Early Modern Catholicism, also published by the University of Chicago Press.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations

1. Introduction
2. Directing Souls
3. Spiritual Exercises
4. General Confession
5. Examination of Conscience
Epilogue

Notes
Bibliography
Index
 
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