Oxford University Press, USA
Vatican & Catholic Social Activism Ohm C
Vatican & Catholic Social Activism Ohm C
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question', the complex set of problems associated with urbanisation, industrialisation, and poverty. As Catholics mobilised against the secular threat, they also struggled with each other to define the proper role of the Church in the public sphere. This study utilizes recently opened files at the
Vatican pertaining to Mexico's post-revolutionary Church-state conflict known as the Cristero Rebellion (1926-1929). However, looking beyond Mexico's exceptional case, the work employs a transnational framework, enabling a better understanding of the supranational relationship between Latin American
Catholic activists and the Vatican. To capture this world historical context, Andes compares Mexico to Chile's own experience of religious conflict. Unlike past scholarship, which has focused almost exclusively on local conditions, Andes seeks to answer how diverse national visions of Catholicism
responded to papal attempts to centralize its authority and universalize Church practices worldwide. The Vatican and Catholic Activism in Mexico and Chile applies research on the interwar papacy, which is almost exclusively European in outlook, to a Latin American context. The national cases presented illuminate how Catholicism shaped public life in Latin America as the Vatican sought to define
Catholic participation in Mexican and Chilean national politics. It reveals that Catholic activism directly influenced the development of new political movements such as Christian Democracy, which remained central to political life in the region for the remainder of the twentieth century.
Author: Stephen J. C. Andes
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 03/28/2014
Pages: 266
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.05lbs
Size: 8.50h x 5.70w x 1.00d
ISBN: 9780199688487
About the Author
Stephen J. C. Andes received his doctorate at Oxford University and is assistant professor in the history of Latin America at Louisiana State University. The Mexico Section of the Latin American Studies Association awarded him the best dissertation prize in 2010-2011. His recent work includes an article exploring the impact of the Vatican on Catholic identity in post-revolutionary Mexico and a chapter in an edited volume detailing the impact of the Cristero Rebellion (1926-1929) on Chilean Catholics. In April 2012 he published an article in The Americas journal entitled A Catholic Alternative to Revolution: The Survival of Social Catholicism in Postrevolutionary Mexico. His current book project is a biography of Gustavo Gutierrez, one of the intellectual founders of liberation theology.
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