- The Oxford Handbook of Early Modern English Literature and Religion
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- List of Illustrations
- List of Abbreviations
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- Chronology
- The Pre-Reformation Landscape
- The Henrician Reform
- Religious Change in the Mid-Tudor Period
- The Elizabethan Church of England and the Origins of Anglicanism
- Early Stuart Controversy: Church, State, and the Sacred
- Religion in Times of War and Republic, 1642–60
- Religion and the Government of the Later Stuarts
- Translation
- Prayer and Prophecy
- Lyric Poetry
- Drama
- The Sermon
- Autobiographical Writings
- Satire and Polemic
- Neo-Latin Writings and Religion
- ‘What England Has to Offer’: Erasmus, Colet, More and their Circle
- John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs : Tragedies of Tyrants
- Edmund Spenser
- Christopher Marlowe and Religion
- Philip Sidney and Mary Sidney Herbert: Piety and Poetry
- John Donne
- Lucy Hutchinson
- John Milton
- Lay Households
- Female Religious Houses
- Sectarian Groups
- Quakers
- Exiles at Home
- Exiles Abroad
- The Jewish Diaspora
- Islamic Communities
- Settlers in New Worlds
- The Bible
- Authority, Religion, and the State
- ‘Finding the Genuine Light of Nature’: Religion and Science
- Body and Soul
- Sacred and Secular Love: ‘I Will Lament, and Love’
- The Art and Craft of Dying
- Sin, Judgement, and Eternity
- Appendix Resources: A Beginner’s Guide
- Bibliography
- Index
Abstract and Keywords
Mid-sixteenth-century England witnessed unprecedented religio-political turmoil. Following the death of Henry VIII in 1547, the government of Edward VI fostered a controversial programme of Protestant reform by instituting public worship in the vernacular based upon Bible readings, officially authorized sermons, and rejection of transubstantiation and replacement of the Mass with celebration of Holy Communion in the form of a communal meal in accordance with the second Book of Common Prayer (1552). The government relaxed restraints on Protestant propaganda at the same time that it blocked publication of Roman Catholic books. Following King Edward’s death in 1553, Mary I reversed changes in the state religion introduced under her late father and brother. Book publication underwent contraction as the government encouraged renewed publication of Roman Catholic books. Following the accession of Elizabeth I in 1558, her government restored Protestant doctrine and worship in line with the 1552 prayer book.
Keywords: Church, religion, reform, reaction, worship, heresy, publication, censorship
John N. King is Distinguished University Professor and Humanities Distinguished Professor of English and Religious Studies in the Department of English at Ohio State University. His numerous books include English Reformation Literature: The Tudor Origins of the Protestant Tradition (Princeton University Press, 1982), Spenser's Poetry and the Reformation Tradition (Princeton University Press, 1990), and Foxe's Book of Martyrs and Early Modern Print Culture (Cambridge University Press, 2006). He is the editor of the journal Reformation.
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- The Oxford Handbook of Early Modern English Literature and Religion
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- List of Illustrations
- List of Abbreviations
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- Chronology
- The Pre-Reformation Landscape
- The Henrician Reform
- Religious Change in the Mid-Tudor Period
- The Elizabethan Church of England and the Origins of Anglicanism
- Early Stuart Controversy: Church, State, and the Sacred
- Religion in Times of War and Republic, 1642–60
- Religion and the Government of the Later Stuarts
- Translation
- Prayer and Prophecy
- Lyric Poetry
- Drama
- The Sermon
- Autobiographical Writings
- Satire and Polemic
- Neo-Latin Writings and Religion
- ‘What England Has to Offer’: Erasmus, Colet, More and their Circle
- John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs : Tragedies of Tyrants
- Edmund Spenser
- Christopher Marlowe and Religion
- Philip Sidney and Mary Sidney Herbert: Piety and Poetry
- John Donne
- Lucy Hutchinson
- John Milton
- Lay Households
- Female Religious Houses
- Sectarian Groups
- Quakers
- Exiles at Home
- Exiles Abroad
- The Jewish Diaspora
- Islamic Communities
- Settlers in New Worlds
- The Bible
- Authority, Religion, and the State
- ‘Finding the Genuine Light of Nature’: Religion and Science
- Body and Soul
- Sacred and Secular Love: ‘I Will Lament, and Love’
- The Art and Craft of Dying
- Sin, Judgement, and Eternity
- Appendix Resources: A Beginner’s Guide
- Bibliography
- Index