Authors: Patricia Ranft, Bonnie Wheeler
ISBN-13: 9781403968470, ISBN-10: 1403968470
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Date Published: April 2006
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Patricia Ranft, Professor of History, emerita, at Central Michigan University, is the author of numerous studies on religious, intellectual and women's history. Her books include Women and the Religious Life in Premodern Europe (1996), a History Book Club selection; Women and Spiritual Equality in Christian Tradition (1998); A Woman's Way: The Forgotten History of Women Spiritual Directors (2000); and Women in Western Intellectual Culture, 600-1500 (2002), all published by Palgrave Macmillan. With this current study she returns to her earlier interest in the medieval religious renewal movement, about which she published some dozen articles.
Historians have long noted the intense debates nineteenth- and twentieth-century scholars had over the concept of work, but few are aware of the medieval debates that set the stage for modern discussions. Indeed, medieval society established the framework within which modern Western ideas about work have grown. It is essential, therefore, that we learn what medieval thinkers had to say on the subject. This study addresses this need by examining the thought of Peter Damian and numerous other religious leaders and groups of the High Middle Ages for evidence of their contributions. The result is a deepening of our historical understanding of the concept of work as well as widening our appreciation of the modern world's debt to medieval society.
1 | Early Christian attitudes toward work | 13 |
2 | The eleventh-century world of Peter Damian | 33 |
3 | Damian's social theology | 55 |
4 | Damian's apostolate : theology of work in action | 77 |
5 | The regular canons | 99 |
6 | The Cistercians | 121 |
7 | Carthusians, women, and marginal groups | 141 |
8 | The Mendicants | 169 |
9 | Epilogue | 191 |