The Religious Field during the Long Fifteenth Century Framing Religious Change beyond Traditional Paradigms

Introducing a thematic section, this article presents an overview and some of the theoretical considerations resulting from COST Action IS1301, an international research network devoted to the study of lay religious culture during the long fifteenth century. A particular aim of this network was to d...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inChurch history and religious culture Vol. 99; no. 3/4; pp. 303 - 329
Main Authors Corbellini, Sabrina, Steckel, Sita
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Brill 04.12.2019
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Summary:Introducing a thematic section, this article presents an overview and some of the theoretical considerations resulting from COST Action IS1301, an international research network devoted to the study of lay religious culture during the long fifteenth century. A particular aim of this network was to discuss new European narratives framing the important transformations of lay religious culture during the period c. 1350–1550—a complex historical process that is still often obscured by the competing older narratives of Reformation, humanism, and Renaissance which shape the historiographical heritage. To get beyond the “methodological nationalism” and “methodological modernism” inherent in older paradigms, the article suggests viewing the transformation of lay religious culture as a long-term process of cultural evolution. It closes with an overview of the most important aspects of this evolutionary process during the long fifteenth century.
ISSN:1871-241X
1871-2428
1871-241X
DOI:10.1163/18712428-09903002