Newman and his Family
Autor Edward Shorten Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 aug 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780567104342
ISBN-10: 0567104346
Pagini: 448
Ilustrații: 64
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.73 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0567104346
Pagini: 448
Ilustrații: 64
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.73 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția T&T Clark
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Introduction
1. Father and Son
2. Mrs. Newman and Amor Matris
3. Charles Newman and the Idea of Socialism
4. Frank Newman and the Search for Truth
5. Mary Newman and the World to Come
6. Harriet Newman and English Anti-Romanism
7. Jemima Newman and the Misery of Difference
8. James Rickards Mozley and Late Victorian Scepticism
Conclusion: Family, Faith and Love
1. Father and Son
2. Mrs. Newman and Amor Matris
3. Charles Newman and the Idea of Socialism
4. Frank Newman and the Search for Truth
5. Mary Newman and the World to Come
6. Harriet Newman and English Anti-Romanism
7. Jemima Newman and the Misery of Difference
8. James Rickards Mozley and Late Victorian Scepticism
Conclusion: Family, Faith and Love
Notă biografică
Edward Short
Descriere
This book explores how John Henry Newman (1801-90) both learned from and was transformed by members of his family. Based on vast correspondence, it reveals how family differences led Newman to a deeper understanding of such themes as home and ostracism, failure and faith, conversion and apostasy, disunity and prayer, infirmity and love.
Caracteristici
Reveals how difficulties affecting Newman's family deepened his understanding of the 'call of charity.'
Recenzii
As in his first book, Edward Short artfully portrays here the personal influences that formed the character and mind of John Henry Newman. Where Newman and His Contemporaries successfully re-positioned the man among a constellation of his cultural and literary fellows, Newman and His Family charts out the shifting angles and dimensions of a tighter, more powerful ring of influences around the Victorian sage: his father, mother, brothers, sisters, and nephew. Again, Short's well-wrought chapters, with their characteristic grace, aplomb, and light-borne wit, bring a much-wanted human richness to our understanding of a man we are only beginning to know.
Newman and his Family is a psychological and spiritual voyage around the great Cardinal in the often fraught context of his familial relationships, which will be fascinating equally to Catholics, other faiths and unbelievers. Newman himself said that there was nothing more interesting than the ten thousand little details and complications of daily life and family history. With the wisdom of empathy, Edward Short’s gift is to let us hear Newman speak in his own voice, so distant from our own times and yet still so immediate. In this meticulously researched and lovingly written book, Newman has found his ideal biographer.
Newman and his Family is one of the most remarkable books I have read in many years. For newcomers it presents Newman from within, as he really was. For those already familiar with Newman's writings, Edward Short brings informed, refreshing, always original, and sometimes provocative insight into the greatest English religious figure of his time and ours. Here is Newman as understood by, and not understood by his family--and what a family! This often gripping book deserves to find a wide readership. I suspect it will become a classic.
an important, fascinating, and well-researched exploration of the family context and influence on Newman’s life and thought.
Short manages a fresh perspective on a much written subject. Analysing Newman’s relations with his family - none of whom followed him into Rome – he illuminates not only Newman’s religious development but that of his whole age... [This is] an elegant and erudite book, showing how Newman struggled in his thought to respond to his relatives view whilst answering “the call of charity” to them. It will benefit any level of university student or intelligent layperson who reads it.
Newman and his Family is a psychological and spiritual voyage around the great Cardinal in the often fraught context of his familial relationships, which will be fascinating equally to Catholics, other faiths and unbelievers. Newman himself said that there was nothing more interesting than the ten thousand little details and complications of daily life and family history. With the wisdom of empathy, Edward Short’s gift is to let us hear Newman speak in his own voice, so distant from our own times and yet still so immediate. In this meticulously researched and lovingly written book, Newman has found his ideal biographer.
Newman and his Family is one of the most remarkable books I have read in many years. For newcomers it presents Newman from within, as he really was. For those already familiar with Newman's writings, Edward Short brings informed, refreshing, always original, and sometimes provocative insight into the greatest English religious figure of his time and ours. Here is Newman as understood by, and not understood by his family--and what a family! This often gripping book deserves to find a wide readership. I suspect it will become a classic.
an important, fascinating, and well-researched exploration of the family context and influence on Newman’s life and thought.
Short manages a fresh perspective on a much written subject. Analysing Newman’s relations with his family - none of whom followed him into Rome – he illuminates not only Newman’s religious development but that of his whole age... [This is] an elegant and erudite book, showing how Newman struggled in his thought to respond to his relatives view whilst answering “the call of charity” to them. It will benefit any level of university student or intelligent layperson who reads it.