Genre de document:
Livre
Auteur/éditeur:
Jennifer Powell Mcnutt
 
Standard: Mcnutt, Jennifer Powell [Jennifer Powell Mcnutt]
Titre:
Calvin meets Voltaire : the clergy of Geneva in the age of enlightenment, 1685-1798

Standard:

Année de parution:
2013
Lieu de parution:
London and New York

Standard: London [Londres] New York [New York, NY]

Éditeur/imprimeur:
Routledge

Standard: Routledge

ISBN/ISSN:
9781138379732
Pages:
xiii, 358 p.
Nombre des illustrations:
illustrazioni
Format:
25 cm
Sujets:
Calvinisme - Genève - 1600-1800
Calvinisme et Lumières

Table des matières:

Introduction: Geneva and the revisionist enlightement 1. The 'mother church' of a new era 2. Clerical demographics and duties 3. Clerical jeremiads and renunciations 4. Ministers and philosophes 5. Reasonable Calvinism: from the pulpit to the pew 6. Clergy and work of state building Conclusion: The French connection Appendix 1: City pastoral and ordained professors (1685-1798) Appendix 2: Agrégé pastoris (1685-1798) Appendix 3: 'Renouncing' ministers (1685-1798)

Résumé/commentaire:

Dal sito dell'editore: In 1754, Voltaire, one of the most famous and provocative writers of the period, moved to the city of Geneva. Little time passed before he instigated conflict with the clergy and city as he publicly maligned the memory of John Calvin, promoted the culture of the French theater, and incited political unrest within Genevan society. Conflict with the clergy reached a fever pitch in 1757 when Jean d’Alembert published the article ’Genève’ for the Encyclopédie. Much to the consternation of the clergy, his article both castigated Calvin and depicted his clerical legacy as Socinian. Since then, little has been resolved over the theological position of Calvin’s clerical legacy while much has been made of their declining significance in Genevan life during the Enlightenment era. Based upon a decade of research on the sources at Geneva’s Archives d'État and Bibliothèque de Genève, this book provides the first comprehensive monograph devoted to Geneva’s Enlightenment clergy. Examination of the social, political, theological, and cultural encounter of the Reformation with the Enlightenment in the figurative meeting of Calvin and Voltaire brings to light the life, work, and thought of Geneva’s eighteenth-century clergy. In addition to examination of the convergence with the philosophes, prosopographical research uncovers clerical demographics at work. Furthermore, the nature of clerical involvement in Genevan society and periods of political unrest are considered along with the discovery of a ’Reasonable Calvinism’ at work in the public preaching and liturgy of Genevan worship. This research moves Geneva’s narrative beyond a simplistic paradigm of ’decline’ and secularization, offers further evidence for a revisionist understanding of the Enlightenment’s engagement with religion, and locates Geneva’s clergy squarely in the newly emerging category of the ’Religious Enlightenment.’