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Immigrant Church, The - New York's Irish and German Catholics, 1815-1865 (Paperback, New edition)
Loot Price: R948
Discovery Miles 9 480
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Immigrant Church, The - New York's Irish and German Catholics, 1815-1865 (Paperback, New edition)
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Total price: R968
Discovery Miles: 9 680
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A dry survey of "ethnic" Catholicism before the Civil War. The
introduction by Martin P. Mart,/ promises that the book will get
beyond the "official tone or institutional awe" of most worlds on
the American Church of the period, and Dolan does remind us how
poor both the parishes and their members often were - though the
faithful among both Irish and German Catholics tended to be skilled
or at least semi-skilled workers. He describes basement services,
landlords who controlled not only housing but food, and also
indicates the social-control role of the Church in stressing
resignation to God's will and one's station. The conflicts between
Irish and Germans are not very interesting or colorful here; Dolan
does acknowledge, however, how difficult it was for non-Bing Crosby
priests to rally spiritual devotion among immigrants who had been,
at best, indifferent worshippers in the old country. The book also
touches on various devotional emphases - especially, of course, the
"extraordinary" cult of the Virgin Mary - and the hardships of
parochial schools. Dolan's style is geared to neither historians
nor general readers: along with such near-tautologies as "Little
Ireland was unlike Little Italy, and to a similar degree St.
Patrick's was different from the Church of St. Anthony of Padua,"
we learn that "Although German Catholics did not support the
temperance movement in New York, they did not come out in favor of
intemperance." Most memorable among the gray historical
odds-and-ends is the Church's unsuccessful campaign against the
less than sacramental institution of the Irish wake. A
disappointment, on the whole. (Kirkus Reviews)
A view of urban Catholicism, The Immigrant Church focuses on the
people in the pews and furnishes a comparison of Irish and German
Catholic life in mid-nineteenth-century New York City. Nearly
one-half of the city's population in 1865 consisted of Irish and
German Catholics. Singling out three parishes (one Irish, one
German, and one a mixed group of Germans and Irish), Dolan examines
the role of religion in strengthening group life in these ethnic
communities, traces the development of the Catholic Church in the
city, and reveals the relationship between urban and church growth.
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