ABSTRACT

This stimulating volume explores how the memory of the Reformation has been remembered, forgotten, contested, and reinvented between the sixteenth and twenty-first centuries.

Remembering the Reformation traces how a complex, protracted, and unpredictable process came to be perceived, recorded, and commemorated as a transformative event. Exploring both local and global patterns of memory, the contributors examine the ways in which the Reformation embedded itself in the historical imagination and analyse the enduring, unstable, and divided legacies that it engendered. The book also underlines how modern scholarship is indebted to processes of memory-making initiated in the early modern period and challenges the conventional models of periodisation that the Reformation itself helped to create. This collection of essays offers an expansive examination and theoretically engaged discussion of concepts and practices of memory and Reformation.

This volume is ideal for upper level undergraduates and postgraduates studying the Reformation, Early Modern Religious History, Early Modern European History, and Early Modern Literature.

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

Remembering the Reformation

part I|38 pages

Repressed memory

chapter 2|18 pages

Stilled lives, still lives

Reformation memorial focus

chapter 3|18 pages

The inheritance of loss

Post-Reformation memory culture and the limits of antiquarian discourse

part II|38 pages

Divided memory

chapter 4|17 pages

Bread and stone

Catholic memory in post-Reformation Leiden

chapter 5|19 pages

Remembering the Holy League

Material memories in early modern France

part III|39 pages

Fragmented memory

chapter 7|18 pages

Rioting blacksmiths and Jewish women

Pillarised Reformation memory in early modern Poland

part IV|36 pages

Inherited memory

chapter 8|15 pages

The first among the many

Early modern cultural memory and the Hussites

part V|34 pages

Invented memory

chapter 10|17 pages

The material of memory in the seventeenth-century Andes

The Cross of Carabuco and local history

part VI|36 pages

Migrating memory

chapter 12|17 pages

On the road

Exile, experience, and memory in the Anabaptist diaspora

part VII|57 pages

Extended memory

chapter 14|20 pages

The stones will cry out

Victorian and Edwardian memorials to the Reformation martyrs

chapter 15|21 pages

Religious heritage and civic identity

Remembering the Reformation in Geneva from the sixteenth to the twenty-first century

chapter 16|14 pages

Afterword

Memory practices and global Protestantism