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Preachers, Partisans, and Rebellious Religion: Vernacular Writing and the Hussite Movement

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In early fifteenth-century Prague, disagreements about religion came to be shouted in the streets and taught to the laity in the vernacular, giving rise to a new kind of public engagement that would persist into the early modern era and beyond. The reforming followers of Jan Hus brought theological learning to the people through a variety of genres, including songs, poems, tractates, letters, manifestos, and sermons. At the same time, university masters provided the laity with an education that enabled them to discuss contentious issues and arrive at their own conclusions, emphasizing that they held the freedom to make up their own minds about important theological issues. This marketplace of competing religious ideas in the vernacular emerged in Bohemia a full hundred years before the Reformation.

In Preachers, Partisans, and Rebellious Religion, Marcela K. Perett examines the early phases of the so-called Hussite revolution, between 1412, when Jan Hus first radicalized his followers, and 1436, the year of the agreement at the Council of Basel granting papal permission for the ritual practice of the Utraquist, or moderate Hussite, faction to continue. These were years during which the leaders of competing reform movements needed to garner the laity's support and employed the vernacular for that purpose, translating and simplifying basic theological arguments about the Bible, the church's ritual practice, and authority in the church. Perett illustrates that the vernacular discourse, even if it revolved around the same topics, was nothing like the Latin debates on the issues, often appealing to emotion rather than doctrinal positions. In the end, as Preachers, Partisans, and Rebellious Religion demonstrates, the process of vernacularization increased rather than decreased religious factionalism and radicalism as agreement about theological issues became impossible.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published October 19, 2018

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About the author

Marcela K. Perett

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Marcela K. Perett teaches history at North Dakota State University.

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Author 23 books84 followers
December 28, 2018
A thoroughly revisionist treatment of Jan Huss, based on re-examination of the vernacular literature of the Hussites and their antagonists. Perett takes this literature seriously as to its origins, its messages, and its consequences. Vernacular writings - treatises and songs - were not, as one might infer from the term, from the ordinary people. Rather, they were works composed in the vernacular language, by clerics (academics), in order to inform and stir the populace. "The decision to bring theological argumentation to the people was revolutionary," writes Perett. And thus historic. Still, the decision had effects not anticipated or desired - polarization, division, violence, and historical confusion. This was the "cost of theology in the vernacular." A reader of Perett's work at this point in the twenty-first century cannot help reflecting on the despotic dangers of free-range public discourse. This reader, as a self-conscious public intellectual writing in the vernacular, logs her work as a cautionary tale.
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