Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction The Politics of Ritual Kinship
- 1 The development of confraternity studies over the past thirty years
- 2 Homosociality and civic (dis)order in late medieval Italian confraternities
- 3 Confraternities and lay female religiosity in late medieval and Renaissance Umbria
- 4 The bounds of community: commune, parish, confraternity, and charity at the dawn of a new era in Cortona
- 5 Men and women in Roman confraternities in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries: roles, functions, expectations
- 6 The Medici and the youth Confraternity of the Purification of the Virgin, 1434–1506
- 7 In loco parentis: confraternities and abandoned children in Florence and Bologna
- 8 The first Jesuit confraternities and marginalized groups in sixteenth-century Rome
- 9 Jewish confraternal piety in sixteenth-century Ferrara: continuity and change
- 10 The scuole piccole of Venice: formations and transformations
- 11 Relaunching confraternities in the Tridentine era: shaping conscience and Christianizing society in Milan and Lombardy
- 12 The development of Jesuit confraternity activity in the Kingdom of Naples in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
- 13 Corpus Domini: ritual metamorphoses and social changes in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Genoa
- 14 Faith's boundaries: ritual and territory in rural Piedmont in the early modern period
- 15 The suppression of confraternities in Enlightenment Florence
- Bibliography
- Index
- CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN ITALIAN HISTORY AND CULTURE
14 - Faith's boundaries: ritual and territory in rural Piedmont in the early modern period
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction The Politics of Ritual Kinship
- 1 The development of confraternity studies over the past thirty years
- 2 Homosociality and civic (dis)order in late medieval Italian confraternities
- 3 Confraternities and lay female religiosity in late medieval and Renaissance Umbria
- 4 The bounds of community: commune, parish, confraternity, and charity at the dawn of a new era in Cortona
- 5 Men and women in Roman confraternities in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries: roles, functions, expectations
- 6 The Medici and the youth Confraternity of the Purification of the Virgin, 1434–1506
- 7 In loco parentis: confraternities and abandoned children in Florence and Bologna
- 8 The first Jesuit confraternities and marginalized groups in sixteenth-century Rome
- 9 Jewish confraternal piety in sixteenth-century Ferrara: continuity and change
- 10 The scuole piccole of Venice: formations and transformations
- 11 Relaunching confraternities in the Tridentine era: shaping conscience and Christianizing society in Milan and Lombardy
- 12 The development of Jesuit confraternity activity in the Kingdom of Naples in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
- 13 Corpus Domini: ritual metamorphoses and social changes in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Genoa
- 14 Faith's boundaries: ritual and territory in rural Piedmont in the early modern period
- 15 The suppression of confraternities in Enlightenment Florence
- Bibliography
- Index
- CAMBRIDGE STUDIES IN ITALIAN HISTORY AND CULTURE
Summary
Local religion has often been analysed largely as expressions of mentalités or as a set of spiritual attitudes. This seriously distorts the sources on this subject which have come down to us; it abstracts beliefs from the context in which they were recorded and separates them from the institutions which have inventoried and classified them. Such a selective approach reflects a conviction that the religious behavior of rural and urban populations under the Ancien Régime can be analysed without reference to other forms of activity. The actual practices of particular individuals or of groups are subsumed under their religious aspirations, without considering the fact that these practices are only known to us through the mediation of the ecclesiastics and professionals who have recorded them. The approach presupposes that daily life was able to find full expression in religious idealism: it assumes a seamless continuum between practices and beliefs.
This essay proposes to analyse local religion as a group of practices which interact systematically with local cultural, political and social life. On such a reading, ritual kinship groups should not be analysed through some abstract institutional identity, but must be approached through the rituals by which their members stake out power and territory in the community. This article considers four groups through which social kinship was expressed in early modern rural Piedmont: confrarie, disciplinati, societates, and consortie.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Politics of Ritual KinshipConfraternities and Social Order in Early Modern Italy, pp. 243 - 261Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
- 1
- Cited by