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New Approaches to European History #11

Ritual in Early Modern Europe

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This new and expanded edition of the first comprehensive study of rituals in early modern Europe examines the impact on the European interpretation of ritual from the discoveries of new civilizations in the Americas and missionary efforts in China. It also adds more material about rituals peculiar to women. Edward Muir draws on extensive historical research to emphasize the persistence of traditional Christian ritual practices, even as enlightened elites attempted to choose reason over passion, textual interpretation over ritual action, and moral rectitude over gaining access to supernatural powers of anti-Christian rituals. First Edition Hb (1997) 0-521-40169-0 First Edition Pb (1997) 0-521-40967-5

334 pages, Paperback

First published September 28, 1997

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Edward Muir

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Justin Bailey.
Author 3 books43 followers
February 14, 2014
Edward Muir’s Ritual in Early Modern Europe describes the Reformation as a process of distanciation from the material world, relocating the locus of the sacred from the materially accessible to the inwardly apprehensible. With a shift in focus from real presence to represented presence, and from direct encounter to description (the exposition of truth), ritual became more a matter of cognitive apprehension than visceral experience. Reformers seeking clarity and certainty “replaced the mass with the sermon” (184) and tended to intellectualize faith. The core ritual question correspondingly shifted from “what emotions does it evoke?” to “what does it mean?” (158)

The strength of Muir’s argument is its clarity, and while Muir gravitates towards the sensational, lurid and macabre, his vignettes give a rich texture to his argument. I do wonder, however, whether these extreme stories give an accurate description of what late medieval life was actually like. Nevertheless, Muir avoids what Charles Taylor called “the subtraction story”: a relatively straight line from the numinous medieval world to the disenchanted world of modernity via the Protestant Reformation. Instead, he attempts to show how the Protestant relationship with ritual was not so much a matter of loss as of transformation.
135 reviews44 followers
January 8, 2010
Re-read January 7, 2010: very textbook-y. I think it was at this point that I began to understand just how very right my peers were when they told me that at some point in my reading, I would begin to be able to tell what the book was going to say before I'd even read it. Admittedly, I'd already read it, but still.

Basically: early modern life organized around ritual; the Reformation reconfigured ritual life in Protestant areas and the Council of Trent placed ritual in Catholic areas more squarely under control of the church; and the Enlightenment changed everything. Obviously.
Profile Image for Autumn.
Author 2 books13 followers
August 4, 2019
An excellently defended proposal - that the Reformation was not an argument about doctrine but an argument about the place, nature, and meaning of ritual. Thoroughly researched and easy to read, Muir makes his case while providing many intriguing questions for further study. Though I took issue with a few of his conclusions, I think Muir does a great job of defending his ideas and giving me plenty to think about as I continue my own research.
Profile Image for StrangeBedfellows.
581 reviews37 followers
December 11, 2012
This is one of the most interesting books I've ever read. The history presented is good, but what really takes the cake are Muir's ideas on ritual, and how well his assertions fit into both history and modern life. In fact, I often applied this book to literary studies and criticism ... it earned me several high grades and a few awards.
Profile Image for Autumn Chrunik.
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November 10, 2015
I had to read this for school so I'm not gonna give it a rating. Although, most of it was pretty boring, some of it was pretty interesting too.
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