The Reformation: A Very Short Introduction
M**R
Insightful and invaluable assessment of The Reformation
Without time or resources for personal research, I find this work, and the introduction to Methodism, an excellent resource. Well written the author distills the historical records and narratives not only shaping the contures of The Reformation, the brutal honesty of the darker side destroys romantic myths and idealizations one may hold as a result of a superficial reading and understanding of the event that not only proved a watershed in theological positions but in the shaping of political and cultural beliefs and values. I highly recommend this book. So much valuable information in a condensed and inexpensive work.
J**N
Worth the Money
Decent introduction to a complicated subject.
K**N
Excellent Introduction to a Turbulent Era
Peter Marshall did an excellent job of making the Reformation (actually, Reformations) understandable. Although I am still unclear on some of the theological and philosophical divides between Catholicism and Protestantism and their ideological offshoots, I have a much better grasp of the subject matter thanks to Marshall's clear writing.In about 130 pages, Marshall explores the philosophical, cultural, and political effects of the religious movements collectively known as the Reformation. There is a valuable chronology at the back of the book that will make this a go-to reference material even after you've read the text. As with the other Very Short Introductions in the Oxford series, this has fairly short chapters that are broken down into several headings, which makes the book easy to read and easy to go back and find passages later.For a potentially hot topic, the text seemed well balanced and did not appear to favor either religious camp, so there was a distinct lack of "us-versus-them" mentality in the text -- as it should be for an academic work.Marshall also mentioned Max Weber and his "Protestant work ethic," in which Weber argued that it was the Protestant work ethic which drove Protestant nations to develop faster and more thoroughly than Catholic nations with similar resources at their disposal. Marshall offered some brief, but insightful, reasons why Weber may have been way off base in his conclusions, arguing cogently that it was a combination of factors that dictated how nations developed rather than a single philosophical difference.I would recommend this as a first read on the Reformation, although there may be some names that person new to the subject would still need to look up. But these Very Short Introductions aren't "Dummies" books; despite the word "introduction" in the subtitle, there is a tacit assumption that you have some background in history or at least have heard some of the names mentioned in the text. This is not an insurmountable obstacle to reading the book, though.
P**N
Required reading for anyone
If you want to know when, where, and how modern society started, this book gives an excellent overview and central themes that continue to this day. You’ll be able to recognize the different reformations that you are aligned with, and the roots of the secularizations springing from the sacred’s reformation.
K**S
cynical writing; biased presentation
Having read a truly excellent Very Short Introduction on St. Paul, I had high hopes for this offering on the Reformation(s). Unfortunately, there is a perceptible anti-Protestantism bias in the writing which overall is distractingly cynical. A more objective and less personal treatment would have increased my confidence in the information and been more edifying.
J**Y
superb concise history in a user friendly format
Grappling with the meaning of Mendelssohn's "Reformation" Symphony, and the composer's use of the well known Lutheran hymn "Ein Feste Burg," in his powerful final movement, I came upon Peter Marshall's compact, enlightening book on the Reformation published in 2009 by Oxford University. Lucid, thoughtful, wide ranging, at times even wry, this is a modern, even-handed dissection of the sixteenth century beginnings of the Protestant faith which explains the Catholic counter reformation as well. Marshall is a superb writer - well equipped for these short succinct history treatises - who packs his tight sentences with meaning, never wandering on incidentals while moving through his points effortlessly. He ends, eschewing overstatement, with this compelling thought: the Reformation advanced the meaning and purpose of human existence, enhanced the mutual obligations of people in a society and exposed "the balance of conscience and political obedience" in a rational society. I look forward to reading more of these short histories by the Oxford University Press.
R**R
Highly recommended
Concise, entertainingly written, and well-balanced! An excellent introduction which debunks many popular views on this turbulent period without being unnecessarily revisionist.
T**S
well written and a good starting point for further reading
Often these titles present as a general introduction but it turns out to be written from a very specific perspective making them rather 'hit and miss'. In this case it as as expected, well written and a good starting point for further reading.
G**M
Very good introduction
A very thorough but succinct review of the events leading up to and surrounding the reformation, with a nod to the societal and political factors surrounding the events of the reformation. The book does presuppose some basic awareness of historical and geographic facts, but is relatively easy to read and understand. A very nice introduction.
J**P
None
Short an sufficient.
E**N
A superb summary
This book by Peter Marshall, in the excellent OUP Short Introduction series, is superb. The Reformation can be a broad, diffuse and often contentious subject and Marshall handles its various elements very clearly and fairly. He takes no particular partisan stance and this will make the book equally acceptable to Protestant and Catholic alike. He accepts that although dating the start of the Reformation is fairly easy with Luther and a few notable predecessors, deciding when it ended is more of an issue. Marshall takes us through the causes and development of the Reformation's various stages from the church-reforming 'blunt instrument' of Luther to the 'sniper-rifle' precision theology of Calvin. He explains the disagreements between Lutherans and Calvinists and how they each influenced the history of Europe in different ways, not least in the Catholic Counter-Reformation that they unleashed. He traces the impact of the reformed churches and their interactions with the state, and summarises this well at the end. Marshall also examines specific themes relating to the Reformation and its world-view on things: art, theatre, music, witchcraft and others. He makes the link between how what was produced by the Reformation interlinked with the development of the Enlightenment, a more secularly driven movement, and his series of paradoxes at the end of the book may bring a wry smile too. Not all movements achieve quite what they set out to. This is a brilliant survey of the Reformation and one of the very best of the Short Introduction series.
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