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Late medieval church courts frequently excommunicated debtors at
the request of their creditors. Tyler Lange analyzes over 11,000
excommunications between 1380 and 1530 in order to explore the
forms, rhythms, and cultural significance of the practice. Three
case studies demonstrate how excommunication for debt facilitated
minor transactions in an age of scarce small-denomination coinage
and how interest-free loans and sales credits could be viewed as
encouraging the relations of charitable exchange that were supposed
to exist between members of Christ's body. Lange also demonstrates
how from 1500 or so believers gradually turned away from the
practice and towards secular courts, at the same time as they
retained the moralized, economically irrational conception of
indebtedness we have yet to shake. The demand-driven rise and fall
of excommunication for debt reveals how believers began to reshape
the institutional Church well before Martin Luther posted his
theses.
An essential read for activists, community organizers, justice
scholars, and academic administrators, Critical Animal Studies and
Social Justice: Critical Theory, Dismantling Speciesism, and Total
Liberation is a collection that combines scholarship and activism
in nine ground-breaking and provocative chapters. The book includes
contributions from around the world influenced by critical theory,
feminism, social justice, political theory, media studies,
environmental justice, food justice, disability studies, and Black
liberation. By promoting total liberation and liberatory politics,
these essays challenge the reader to think about new approaches to
justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion . The contributors also
examine and disrupt many of the exclusionary assumptions and
behaviors by those working toward justice and liberation,
encouraging the reader to reflect on their own thoughts and
actions. They emphasize the direct links between exploitation of
animals, the planet, and people, the significance of which we can
no longer afford to ignore.
The political culture of absolute monarchy that structured French
society into the eighteenth century is generally believed to have
emerged late in the sixteenth century. This new interpretation of
the origins of French absolutism, however, connects the
fifteenth-century conciliar reform movement in the Catholic Church
to the practice of absolutism by demonstrating that the monarchy
appropriated political models derived from canon law. Tyler Lange
reveals how the reform of the Church offered a crucial motive and
pretext for a definitive shift in the practice and conception of
monarchy, and explains how this First French Reformation enabled
Francis I and subsequent monarchs to use the Gallican Church as a
useful deposit of funds and judicial power. In so doing, the book
identifies the theoretical origins of later absolutism and the
structural reasons for the failure of French Protestantism.
Late medieval church courts frequently excommunicated debtors at
the request of their creditors. Tyler Lange analyzes over 11,000
excommunications between 1380 and 1530 in order to explore the
forms, rhythms, and cultural significance of the practice. Three
case studies demonstrate how excommunication for debt facilitated
minor transactions in an age of scarce small-denomination coinage
and how interest-free loans and sales credits could be viewed as
encouraging the relations of charitable exchange that were supposed
to exist between members of Christ's body. Lange also demonstrates
how from 1500 or so believers gradually turned away from the
practice and towards secular courts, at the same time as they
retained the moralized, economically irrational conception of
indebtedness we have yet to shake. The demand-driven rise and fall
of excommunication for debt reveals how believers began to reshape
the institutional Church well before Martin Luther posted his
theses.
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