CFP: Lay Devotion and the Urban Setting in Early Modern Europe (no deadline noted; journal issue)
> CALL FOR CONTRIBUTORS
>
> to a special issue of Journal of Religious History entitled 'Lay
> Devotion and the Urban Setting in Early Modern Europe'.
>
> This is a call for contributors of articles to a special issue of the
> Journal of Religious History. The issue is to be dedicated to the
> theme of the elusive yet vital relationship between the devotional
> practices of the European laity and the urban context of such lay
> devotion in the late-medieval and early-modern periods. The
> historiography on this general area of lay piety and devotion,
> particularly as regards the European religious confraternities, has
> grown enormously in the last generation. In part, however, because the
> surviving sources tend to describe such devotional practices from
> within institutional parameters, themes such as the wider significance
> of institutions like religious confraternities to the life of the
> pre-modern city as a whole, and the way that liturgy and devotion
> became interwoven with the structures and values of everyday life have
> been less thoroughly and convincingly examined.
>
> The special issue of the addresses this theme, and the editor
> therefore particularly welcomes contributions that utilise a
> wide-range of source materials, or which employ an interdisciplinary
> methodology, to go beyond the description and/or analysis of
> devotional practices themselves and to relate them to other areas of
> urban existence, and in particular their relationship to urban space
> and the fabric of the city. Of especial interest are:
>
> - articles that examine the visual manifestation of lay piety and
> devotion from such an interdisciplinary standpoint, in public
> processions, the creation and veneration of sacred images, uses of
> public space and the like;
>
> - articles which seek to demonstrate how the values and beliefs that
> underlay organised lay devotion informed, and in turn were modified
> by, contact with the quotidian life of the city.
>
> Contributions on all areas of late-medieval, Renaissance and
> early-modern Europe will be considered for the issue.
>
> Contributions and/or proposals for articles should be sent in the
> first place to Nicholas Eckstein, Department of History, University of
> Sydney, Mungo MacCallum Building (A17), University of Sydney, Sydney,
> NSW 2006, AUSTRALIA. Tel: +61 (0)2 9351 2155, Fax: +61 (0)2 9351 3918.
>
> Submissions by e-mail attachment, written in Word, are preferred.
> Please send these, or any requests for further information, to:
> <nicholas.eckstein_at_history.usyd.edu.au>
>
> The Journal of Religious History
>
> Journal of Religious History is the most comprehensive journal of its
> kind. Since 1960 it has been a vital source of high quality
> information for all those interested in the place of religion in
> history. The Journal reviews current work on the history of religions
> and their relationship with all aspects of human experience. With high
> quality international contributors, the journal explores religion and
> its related subjects, along with debates on comparative method and
> theory in religious history.
>
> For further information concerning the Journal of Religious History,
> the Religious History Society and matters concerning the submission of
> articles, visit Blackwell Publishers' journals page on the world-wide
> web (http://www.blackwellpublishers.co.uk/jnl_holding_pg.asp) and
> enter search for Journal of Religious History.
>
> The Journal of Religious History follows the Chicago Manual of Style,
> 14th ed. A brief style guide was published in the June 1997 issue of
> the Journal at 247-8. Contributirs will also find this information at
> the JRH web site. For all matters of style with the exception of
> spelling which will continue to follow the Oxford English Dictionary.
> Authors may also refer to Kate L. Turabian's short guide to the
> Chicago style, A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses and
> Dissertations, 6th ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996).
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Received on Tue Aug 14 2001 - 13:16:18 EDT