Religious Books, 1876-1982
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1983
Total Pages: 1322
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1983
Total Pages: 1322
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Bancroft Library
Publisher:
Published: 1969
Total Pages: 694
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Graduate Theological Union. Library
Publisher:
Published: 1972
Total Pages: 1032
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Catherine O'Donnell
Publisher: Brill Research Perspectives in
Published: 2020
Total Pages: 120
ISBN-13: 9789004428102
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFrom Eusebio Kino to Daniel Berrigan, and from colonial New England to contemporary Seattle, Jesuits have built and disrupted institutions in ways that have fundamentally shaped the Catholic Church and American society. As Catherine O'Donnell demonstrates, Jesuits in French, Spanish, and British colonies were both evangelists and agents of empire. John Carroll envisioned an American church integrated with Protestant neighbors during the early years of the republic; nineteenth-century Jesuits, many of them immigrants, rejected Carroll's ethos and created a distinct Catholic infrastructure of schools, colleges, and allegiances. The twentieth century involved Jesuits first in American war efforts and papal critiques of modernity, and then (in accord with the leadership of John Courtney Murray and Pedro Arrupe) in a rethinking of their relationship to modernity, to other faiths, and to earthly injustice. O'Donnell's narrative concludes with a brief discussion of Jesuits' declining numbers, as well as their response to their slaveholding past and involvement in clerical sexual abuse.00Also available in Open Access.
Author: Enrique D. Dussel
Publisher: Burns & Oates
Published: 1995
Total Pages: 232
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Seymour Drescher
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2009-07-27
Total Pages: 939
ISBN-13: 1139482963
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn one form or another, slavery has existed throughout the world for millennia. It helped to change the world, and the world transformed the institution. In the 1450s, when Europeans from the small corner of the globe least enmeshed in the institution first interacted with peoples of other continents, they created, in the Americas, the most dynamic, productive, and exploitative system of coerced labor in human history. Three centuries later these same intercontinental actions produced a movement that successfully challenged the institution at the peak of its dynamism. Within another century a new surge of European expansion constructed Old World empires under the banner of antislavery. However, twentieth-century Europe itself was inundated by a new system of slavery, larger and more deadly than its earlier system of New World slavery. This book examines these dramatic expansions and contractions of the institution of slavery and the impact of violence, economics, and civil society in the ebb and flow of slavery and antislavery during the last five centuries.
Author: Carlos Alberto Montaner
Publisher: Algora Publishing
Published: 2003
Total Pages: 410
ISBN-13: 0875862039
DOWNLOAD EBOOKExamining the historical and cultural influences that have shaped Latin America, this syndicated international journalist and author suggests that they have made it into the most impoverished, unstable and backward region in the Western world.An indispen
Author: David Block
Publisher:
Published: 1994
Total Pages: 264
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKUntil recently, historians of the Christian missions in the New World have seen Missionaries either as saints and martyrs or as brutal disrupters and oppressors. Both the apologists and detractors of mission enterprise have concentrated solely on the missionaries, regarding the native populations either as childlike beneficiaries or as mutely suffering victims. With the growth of ethnohistory as a field of research, new research has sought to reconstruct the situations, the reactions, and the strategies of native groups, thereby seeing the native peoples of the Americas as active agents in their own history. In Mission Culture on the Upper Amazon, David Block describes the formation of a new society in the Moxos region of the Amazon Basin, in what is now northern, or lowland, Bolivia. This society began with the arrival of the Jesuits in the region. The mutual synthesis that became Jesuit mission culture followed, with Moxos Indian cultural survival and adaptation continuing after the expulsion of the Jesuits in 1767. With the cataclysmic onset of the rubber boom, the entire region was plunged into a period of severe exploitation and conflict that persists to this day. Block’s nuanced treatment of the mission encounter—one extending over a large time period—permits a balanced understanding of the mission enterprise, native response, and the cultural synthesis that ensued.
Author: Jacob Blanc
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Published: 2018-04-10
Total Pages: 345
ISBN-13: 0816537143
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"A transnational approach to the history of a key Latin American border region"--Provided by publisher.
Author: Shelley Streeby
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2002-05-10
Total Pages: 401
ISBN-13: 0520223144
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"American Sensations is an erudite and sweeping cultural history of the sensationalist literatures and mass cultures of the American 1848. It is the finest book yet written on the U.S.-Mexican War, and how it was central to the making and unmaking of U.S. mass culture, class, and racial formation."—José David Saldívar, author of Border Matters: Remapping American Cultural Studies "A major work that will challenge current paradigms of nineteenth-century literature and culture. American Sensations brilliantly succeeds in remapping the volatile and shifting terrain of both national identity and literary history in the mid-nineteenth century."—Amy Kaplan, co-editor of Cultures of United States Imperialism