Shadows of Doubt: Language and Truth in Post-Reformation Catholic Culture

Shadows of Doubt: Language and Truth in Post-Reformation Catholic Culture

by Stefania Tutino
Shadows of Doubt: Language and Truth in Post-Reformation Catholic Culture

Shadows of Doubt: Language and Truth in Post-Reformation Catholic Culture

by Stefania Tutino

Hardcover

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Overview

Named a Book of the Year by History Today

In a compelling examination of the hermeneutical and epistemological anxieties gripping both the early modern and our current world, Stefania Tutino shows that post-Reformation Catholicism did not simply usher in modernity, but postmodernity as well. This deft study provides new insight into and a fresh perspective on the context of the Protestant Reformation and the Catholic response to it.

Shadows of Doubt provides a collection of case-studies centered on the relationship between language, the truth of men, and the Truth of theology. Most of these case-studies illuminate little-known figures in the history of early modern Catholicism. While the militant aspects of post-Tridentine Catholicism can be appreciated by studying figures such as Robert Bellarmine or Cesare Baronio, who were the solid pillars of the intellectual and theological structure of the Church of Rome, an understanding of the more fragile and shadowy aspects of early modernity requires an exploration of the demimonde of post-Reformation Catholicism. Tutino examines the thinkers whom few scholars mention and fewer read, demonstrating that post-Reformation Catholicism was not simply a world of solid certainties to be opposed to the Protestant falsehoods, but also a world in which the stable Truth of theology existed alongside and contributed to a number of far less stable truths concerning the world of men. Post-Reformation Catholic culture was not only concerned with articulating and affirming absolute truths, but also with exploring and negotiating the complex links between certainty and uncertainty.

By bringing to light this fascinating and hitherto largely unexamined side of post-Tridentine Catholicism, Tutino reveals that post-Reformation Catholic culture was a vibrant laboratory for many of the issues that we face today: it was a world of fractures and fractured truths which we, with a heightened sensitivity to discrepancies and discontinuities, are now well-suited to understand.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199324989
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 01/23/2014
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 11.50(w) x 7.70(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

Stefania Tutino received her Ph.D. from the Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa, in 2003. She was previously a professor in the Departments of History and Religious Studies at UCSB. Now, she is a Professor of Early Modern History at UCLA. Her research focuses on the intellectual, political, and cultural history of early modern Catholicism.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations

Introduction - Looking Out from the Edge of the Cliff: History, Language, and Truth
Chapter 1 Telling the Truth: Equivocation and Mental Reservation between Morality and Hermeneutics
Chapter 2 Writing the Truth: Post-Reformation Historiography from Agostino Mascardi to Paul Ricoeur
Chapter 3 Writing the Truth: Ecclesiastical History and Its Critics
Chapter 4 Rhetoric, truth, and the Truth
Chapter 5 The Sacrament of Language and the Curse of Speech

Notes
Select Bibliography
Index
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