John Henry Newman and the English Sensibility: Distant Scene

Author:   Dr Jacob Phillips (St Mary's University, UK)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9780567689016


Pages:   152
Publication Date:   04 May 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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John Henry Newman and the English Sensibility: Distant Scene


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Full Product Details

Author:   Dr Jacob Phillips (St Mary's University, UK)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   T.& T.Clark Ltd
ISBN:  

9780567689016


ISBN 10:   0567689018
Pages:   152
Publication Date:   04 May 2023
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: John Henry Newman and Englishness Chapter 2: The English Sensibility Chapter 3: Newman’s Tractarian Compromise Chapter 4: Newman’s Tractarian Reserve Chapter 5: Newman’s Tractarian Empiricism Chapter 6: Compromise in the Second Spring Chapter 7: Reserve in the Second Spring Chapter 8: Empiricism in the Second Spring Chapter 9: Compromise in the Mature Newman Chapter 10: Reserve in the Mature Newman Chapter 11: Empiricism in the Mature Newman Conclusion: Distant Scene Bibliography Index

Reviews

It is a common observation that John Henry Newman was quintessentially English, however Philips demonstrates that in the encounter between Catholicism and Englishness in Newman’s theology, there are both coalescences and corrections to English sensibilities and intellectual fashions. German readers of Newman have long been aware of this. This work by Philips offers a comprehensive treatment of the issue. It is written with a high level of English literary elegance that does justice to the genre of Newman studies. It is likely to become a seminal reference work in the field. -- Tracey Rowland, University of Notre Dame, Australia Dean Church, Newman's lifelong friend, called attention to the convert's inalienable Englishness, his ""chief interests"" being ""for things English -- English literature, English social life, English politics, English religion."" In John Henry Newman and the English Sensibility, Jacob Phillips revisits this characteristic aspect of Newman with fresh, judicious, learned insight. -- Edward Short, author of Newman and his Contemporaries, USA [T]his volume remains a valuable work of scholarship in challenging too easy assumptions that only one interpretation must be right. -- David Brown, University of St Andrews, UK * The Pastoral Review *


It is a common observation that John Henry Newman was quintessentially English, however Philips demonstrates that in the encounter between Catholicism and Englishness in Newman's theology, there are both coalescences and corrections to English sensibilities and intellectual fashions. German readers of Newman have long been aware of this. This work by Philips offers a comprehensive treatment of the issue. It is written with a high level of English literary elegance that does justice to the genre of Newman studies. It is likely to become a seminal reference work in the field. -- Tracey Rowland, University of Notre Dame, Australia Dean Church, Newman's lifelong friend, called attention to the convert's inalienable Englishness, his chief interests being for things English -- English literature, English social life, English politics, English religion. In John Henry Newman and the English Sensibility, Jacob Phillips revisits this characteristic aspect of Newman with fresh, judicious, learned insight. -- Edward Short, author of Newman and his Contemporaries, USA


"It is a common observation that John Henry Newman was quintessentially English, however Philips demonstrates that in the encounter between Catholicism and Englishness in Newman’s theology, there are both coalescences and corrections to English sensibilities and intellectual fashions. German readers of Newman have long been aware of this. This work by Philips offers a comprehensive treatment of the issue. It is written with a high level of English literary elegance that does justice to the genre of Newman studies. It is likely to become a seminal reference work in the field. -- Tracey Rowland, University of Notre Dame, Australia Dean Church, Newman's lifelong friend, called attention to the convert's inalienable Englishness, his ""chief interests"" being ""for things English -- English literature, English social life, English politics, English religion."" In John Henry Newman and the English Sensibility, Jacob Phillips revisits this characteristic aspect of Newman with fresh, judicious, learned insight. -- Edward Short, author of Newman and his Contemporaries, USA [T]his volume remains a valuable work of scholarship in challenging too easy assumptions that only one interpretation must be right. -- David Brown, University of St Andrews, UK * The Pastoral Review *"


Author Information

Jacob Phillips is Director of the Theology Institute at St Mary’s University, UK.

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