Listening to Early Modern Catholicism: Perspectives from Musicology

2018 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-181
Author(s):  
Daniele V. Filippi (book editor) ◽  
Michael Noone (book editor) ◽  
Michael O’Connor (review author)
Author(s):  
Pedro F. Campa

Recensión del libro: O'MALLEY, John W., S.I, [2015]. Art, Controversy, and the Jesuits: The “Imago Primi Saeculi” (1640), Early Modern Catholicism and the Visual Arts Series 12. Philadelphia: St. Joseph’s University Press, 771 pp.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Stefania Tutino

This chapter discusses the historiographical context in which this book is situated, and the scholarly debates to which it seeks to contribute. The chapter also presents the methodological framework of the book and examines the historical and historiographical benefits of a microhistorical analysis. The chapter shows that the story of Carlo Calà and his allegedly holy ancestor enables us to understand better important political, cultural, and theological aspects of early modern Catholicism. The chapter also puts the past in conversation with the present by suggesting that studying how the Roman Inquisition dealt with the problem of discerning the truth from the fake can provide insight into the relationship between truth, authenticity, and belief.


Author(s):  
Grace Harpster

The sanctuary of Loreto, one of Italy’s most renowned pilgrimage destinations, was built to house the relic of the Virgin Mary’s childhood home, but many pilgrims directed their prayers instead to the shrine’s cult image, a Marian statue with a dark appearance. In the late sixteenth century, a time of Catholic reform, many devotees attributed the sculpture’s color to the residue from candle smoke, despite the fact that this departed from reformers’ strict rules of liturgical decorum. The perception of the Virgin of Loreto’s blackened surface as simultaneously sacred and sacrilegious returned agency to the artwork itself. The statue’s sooty accretions suggested negligence and cried out for restoration, but they also defended the cult of images in early modern Catholicism.


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