Overview
- Brings together scholars studying Argentina, Mexico, Brazil, United States, Spain, Portugal, Italy, France, Belgium, and Germany
- Unearths similarities between the political uses of different Marian devotions in modern cultural struggles
- Contributes significantly to the study of the processes of globalization, homogenization, hierarchization, and centralization of Catholicism
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Table of contents (12 chapters)
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Europe
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America
Keywords
About this book
This transnational approach illuminates the deep transformations of devotional cultures across the world. Catholics adopted modern means and new types of religious expression to foster mass devotions that epitomized the catholic essence of the “nation.” In many ways, the development of Marian devotions across the world is also a response to the questioning of Pope Sovereignty. These devotional transformations followed an Ultramontane pattern inspired not only by Rome but also by other successful models approved by the Vatican such as Lourdes. Collectively, they shed new light on the process of globalization and centralization of Catholicism.
Reviews
“This is a rich and stimulating survey of the cult of Mary centered on important shrines of Europe and the Americas in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; the authors pay particular attention to the political context of secularizing states and demonstrate convincingly the mobilizing attraction of this female figure when associated with landscape, place and nation.” (William A. Christian, Religious Scholar, USA )
“Ably introduced by Roberto Di Stefano and Javier Ramón Solans, these essays offer exciting opportunities for fresh thinking about the paradox of secular nation-building and intense religiosity centered on Marian devotion in the combustible politics and transformations of Catholic Europe and Latin America since the mid-nineteenth century. Attending to transnational as well as national and regional developments—with the example of Lourdes looming large—the authors find tracks of Romanization, ecclesiastical promotion, immigration, pilgrimage, religious tourism, and Durkheim’s “contagiousness of the sacred” that begin to connect an array of richly-described places and times.” (William B. Taylor, University of California, Berkeley)
“The politicization of Marian devotions, that strongly characterized Catholicism during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, has been reported in recent studies. This book allows us to understand, for the first time, this phenomenon in all its significance. Not only because it offers a persuasive chronological frame for its secular development but above all because, by using up-to-date methodologies, it enable us to appreciate the circulation of this phenomenon (center-periphery, Europe-America, Church-world) that shaped contemporary culture. A seminal book.” (Daniele Menozzi, Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa)
Editors and Affiliations
About the editors
Francisco Javier Ramón Solans is Research Assistant at the University of Münster, Germany. He is the author of La Virgen del Pilar dice… Usos políticos y nacionales de un culto mariano en la España contemporánea. He has published several articles and books chapters on Marian devotions, political prophecies and Ultramontanism.
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Marian Devotions, Political Mobilization, and Nationalism in Europe and America
Editors: Roberto Di Stefano, Francisco Javier Ramón Solans
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-43443-8
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Cham
eBook Packages: Religion and Philosophy, Philosophy and Religion (R0)
Copyright Information: The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2016
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-319-43442-1Published: 15 December 2016
Softcover ISBN: 978-3-319-82825-1Published: 04 July 2018
eBook ISBN: 978-3-319-43443-8Published: 23 November 2016
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XI, 341
Topics: Religion and Society, Comparative Politics, Catholicism