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Charitable Hatred - Tolerance and Intolerance in England, 1500-1700 (Paperback)
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Charitable Hatred - Tolerance and Intolerance in England, 1500-1700 (Paperback)
Series: Politics, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Charitable Hatred presents a challenging new perspective on
religious tolerance and intolerance in early modern England.
Setting aside traditional models that seek to chart a path of
linear progress from persecution to toleration, it emphasises
instead the complex interplay between these two impulses in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The book examines the
intellectual assumptions that underpinned attitudes towards
religious minorities and the institutional structures and legal
mechanisms by which they were both repressed and accommodated. It
also explores the social realities of prejudice and forbearance,
hostility and harmony, at the level of the neighbourhood and
parish. Simultaneously, it surveys the range of ways in which
dissenting churches and groups responded and adapted to official
and popular intolerance, investigating how the experience of
suffering helped to forge sectarian identities. In analysing the
consequences of the advancing pluralism of English society in the
wake of the Reformation, this study illuminates the cultural
processes that shaped and complicated the conditions of coexistence
before and after the Act of Toleration of 1689. It shows how
personal contact eroded the threatening stereotypes embodied in
contemporary polemic and the tensions that arose because of the gap
between theory and practice. Alexandra Walsham finds that an
instinct for peace and concord often counterbalanced the forces
tending towards confrontation and conflict, but that the virus of
intolerance was ever-present, ready to flare into violence when
conditions were right. While a growing number of voices called for
liberty of conscience, the arguments for enforcing religious
uniformity remained compelling and powerful throughout the period.
The insights that emerge from this richly detailed and original
synthesis will be of significance to scholars and students of early
modern England and of Europe as a whole.
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