Bishops, Wives and Children

Regular price €186.00
A01=Douglas J. Davies
A01=Mathew Guest
Agnostic
Area Bishops
Author_Douglas J. Davies
Author_Mathew Guest
Bishop's Daughter
Bishop's Palace
Bishop's Wife
bishops
Bishop’s Daughter
Bishop’s Palace
Bishop’s Wife
capital
Category=GPS
Category=JBSF
Category=NHD
Category=QR
Category=QRA
Category=QRAB
Category=QRM
clergy
Clergy Children
Clergy Family
clergy family dynamics
clergy family social power
Clergy Household
Clergy Wives
Clerical Home
Clerical Household
deans
diocesan
Diocesan Bishop
ecclesiastical hierarchy
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family
gift exchange anthropology
Husband's Ministry
Husband’s Ministry
Open Catholic
Parochial Clergyman
Parochial Ministry
Personal Development
Religious Capital
religious sociology
rural
secularisation studies
Shared Ministry
spiritual
Spiritual Capital
spiritual capital theory
St George's House
St George’s House
suffragan
Suffragan Bishop
Theological College Training
Vicar's Wife
Vicar’s Wife
wife
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780754654858
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 May 2007
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Christianity as a cultural force, whether rising or falling, has seldom been analysed through the actual processes by which tradition is transmitted, modified, embraced or rejected. This book achieves that end through a study of bishops of the Church of England, their wives and their children, to show how values fostered in the vicarage and palace shape family, work and civic life in a supposedly secular age. Davies and Guest integrate, for the first time, sociological concepts of spiritual capital with anthropological ideas of gift-theory and, alongside theological themes, use these to illuminate how the religious professional functions in mediating tradition and fostering change. Motifs of distant prelates, managerially-minded fathers in God and rebellious clergy children are reconsidered in a critical light as new empirical evidence offers unique insights into how the clergy family functions as an axis of social power in an age incredulous to ecclesiastical hierarchy. Bishops, Wives and Children marks an important advance in the analysis of the spirituality of Catholic, Evangelical and Liberal leaders and their social significance within a distinctive Christian tradition and all it represents in wider British society.
The Revd Professor Douglas J. Davies is Professor in the Study of Religion at the Department of Theology, Durham University, UK and has, for the past three years, been Director of the 'Clergy and British Society' project. He has published widely on a variety of topics, including the rural church, Mormonism and pastoral theology. Among his many distinguished volumes are Death, Ritual and Belief: The Rhetoric of Funerary Rites (1997); The Mormon Culture of Salvation: Force, Grace and Glory (2000); Anthropology and Theology (2002); An Introduction to Mormonism (2003), and Church and Religion in Rural England, (co-author, with Charles Watkins and Michael Winter; 1991). Dr Mathew Guest is Lecturer in Theology and Society at the Department of Theology, Durham University, UK. From 2001-2004, he worked as Senior Research Associate to the 'Clergy and British Society' Project, taking particular responsibility for overseeing and managing the collection and analysis of empirical data. He has also published widely on contemporary British evangelicalism and on Christianity in general. He has co-authored Modern Christianity: Reviewing its Place in Britain Today (with Douglas Davies) (2000), co-edited Congregational Studies in the UK: Christianity in a Post-Christian Context (with Karin Tusting and Linda Woodhead) (2004), and is the author of Evangelical Identity and Contemporary Culture: A Congregational Study in Innovation (forthcoming).