Europe After Wyclif
- Publisher
- Fordham University Press
- Initial publish date
- Nov 2016
- Category
- History, Medieval
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780823274420
- Publish Date
- Nov 2016
- List Price
- $55.00 USD
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Description
This volume brings together scholarship that discusses late-medieval religious controversy on a pan-European scale, with particular attention to developments in England, Bohemia, and at the general councils of the fifteenth century. Controversies such as those that developed in England and Bohemia have received ample attention for decades, and recent scholarship has introduced valuable perspectives and findings to our knowledge of these aspects of European religion, literature, history, and thought.
Yet until recently, scholars working on these controversies have tended to work in regional isolation, a practice that has given rise to the impression that the controversies were more or less insular, their significance measured in terms of their local or regional influence. Europe After Wyclif was designed specifically to encourage analysis of cultural cross-currents—the ways in which regional controversies, while still products of their own environments and of local significance, were inseparable from cultural developments that were experienced internationally.
About the authors
J. Patrick Hornbeck II is Chair and Professor of Theology at Fordham University. He is author of What Is a Lollard? (Oxford University Press, 2010), A Companion to Lollardy (Brill, 2016), and Remembering Wolsey (Fordham, 2019), as well as coeditor of More Than a Monologue: Sexual Diversity and the Catholic Church (Fordham, 2014) and Europe After Wyclif (Fordham, 2016).
J. Patrick Hornbeck II's profile page
Michael Van Dussen is Associate Professor of English at McGill University. He is author of From England to Bohemia: Heresy and Communication in the Later Middle Ages.
Editorial Reviews
. . . An essential contribution to the ongoing work on relationships between heresy and mainstream religious thinking, as well as on the relationships between England and the continent.---—Kantik Ghosh, Trinity College, Oxford