Volume VII of The Oxford Edition of the Sermons of John Donne gathers sermons preached by Donne at different venues for the related liturgical occasions of marriages, christenings, and the churching of women after childbirth. The volume contains ten sermons, seven of them undated and, in the case of the christening sermons, also for parties unknown; one of the two churching sermons survives only in an authorially revised state as two separate -- but obviously coeval -- sermons. Longfellow and McCullough establish that these sermons were preached across almost the whole of Donne's preaching career, from among his earliest (ca. 1615-16) to 1627, four years before his death. In each case an authoritative text has been established by freshly collating multiple copies of the seventeenth-century print editions, as well as multiple manuscript copies which predate the print witnesses. For the first time, these sermons appear with full critical apparatus. The Introduction provides the first dedicated account of the place of sermons in the social, liturgical, and theological contexts of these occasions in post-Reformation England. A headnote to each sermon describes its textual state and supplies local historical, social, and intellectual context, and suggestions for further reading. Extensive commentaries document Donne's use of sources (both acknowledged and unacknowledged), translate passages in foreign languages, and gloss important and unfamiliar words. Although largely neglected by previous scholarship, these sermons emerge here as unique (the only known sermons for churchings), challenging (for views on women and marriage more conservative than many of Donne's contemporaries'), and as evidence of Donne's Calvinist sacramental theology and his anti-Catholicism. They are also fine examples of Donne's skill in crafting emotionally compelling sermons suited to the unique demands of both occasion and auditory.
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Volume VII of The Oxford Edition of the Sermons of John Donne gathers ten sermons preached by Donne at different venues for the related liturgical occasions of marriages, christenings, and the churching of women after childbirth, providing extensive critical apparatus and commentary.
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INTRODUCTION THE SERMONS 1: Preached at a Marriage [Sir Francis Nethersole to Lucy Goodere, February 1619/20] [Gen. 2: 18] 2: By master Doctor Donne at the mariage of mistress washington [Hos. 2: 19] 3: A SERMON PREACHED At the Earl of Bridgewaters house in London at the mariage of his daughter, the Lady Mary, to the eldest sonne of the Lord Herbert of Castle-iland, Novemb. 19. 1627. [Mat. 22: 30.] 4: Preached at a Christning. [Rev. 7: 17] 5: Preached at a Christning. [Eph. 5: 25-7] 6: Preached at a Christning. [I John 5: 7, 8] 7: Preached at a Christning. [Gal. 3: 27] 8: Preached at Essex house, at the Churching of the Lady Doncaster. [S. of S. 5: 3] 9: Preached at a Churching. [Mic. 2: 10] 10: Preached at the Churching of the Countesse of Bridgewater. [Mic. 2: 10] ABBREVIATIONS THE COMMENTARIES INDEXES
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Erica Longfellow holds an AB (Duke) and DPhil (Oxford) in English, and is an ordained priest in the Church of England. Following parish appointments in the diocese of Southwark and a Readership in English Literature at Kingston University, she was appointed Chaplain and Dean of Divinity of New College, Oxford in 2011. She is the author of Women and Religious Writing in Early Modern England (2004). Peter McCullough (BA UCLA, PhD Princeton) was Junior Research Fellow in English at Trinity College, Oxford (1994-7), and, since 1997, is Fellow and Tutor in English at Lincoln College Oxford, and Lecturer and Professor of Early Modern Literature in the Oxford Faculty of English. He is General Editor of The Oxford Edition of the Sermons of John Donne and editor of Volume I: Sermons Preached at the Jacobean Courts, 1615-1619 (2015); editor of Lancelot Andrewes: Selected Sermons and Lectures (2005); and author of Sermons at Court: Religion and Politics in Elizabethan and Jacobean Preaching (1998).
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Gathers sermons long treated ad hoc, or entirely neglected, in Donne studies, with particular significance for re-interpreting Donne's attitudes to women and family, and his sacramental theology Provides the first full assessment of all surviving textual witnesses, both print and manuscript, and complete textual apparatus for ten sermons of John Donne Offers detailed introductions, based on new research, on the social, liturgical, and theological contexts of marriages, christenings, and churchings, and the first account of the place of sermons in them Reveals the unique characteristics of Donne's approaches to these occasions
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199562114
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
880 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
160 mm
Dybde
30 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
496

Om bidragsyterne

Erica Longfellow holds an AB (Duke) and DPhil (Oxford) in English, and is an ordained priest in the Church of England. Following parish appointments in the diocese of Southwark and a Readership in English Literature at Kingston University, she was appointed Chaplain and Dean of Divinity of New College, Oxford in 2011. She is the author of Women and Religious Writing in Early Modern England (2004). Peter McCullough (BA UCLA, PhD Princeton) was Junior Research Fellow in English at Trinity College, Oxford (1994-7), and, since 1997, is Fellow and Tutor in English at Lincoln College Oxford, and Lecturer and Professor of Early Modern Literature in the Oxford Faculty of English. He is General Editor of The Oxford Edition of the Sermons of John Donne and editor of Volume I: Sermons Preached at the Jacobean Courts, 1615-1619 (2015); editor of Lancelot Andrewes: Selected Sermons and Lectures (2005); and author of Sermons at Court: Religion and Politics in Elizabethan and Jacobean Preaching (1998).