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Alternative masculinity? : Catholic missionaries in Scandinavia

Author

Editor

  • Yvonne Maria Werner

Summary, in English

This chapter deals with Italian Barnabites and German Jesuits working as missionaries in the Nordic countries and the ideals of clerical masculinity that they represented. The Barnabites were important in the initial phase of the Catholic missionary activity in the 1860s and 1870s, whereas the Jesuits, ostensibly the most fervent defenders of ultramontane confessionalism, held a dominant position in the Swedish and Danish church in the ensuing period. The humble, pious, obedient, and self-sacrificing ideals of manliness expressed in the reports of these celibate missionaries stood in sharp contrast not only to modern Protestant ideas of manhood, but also to the prevailing middle-class understanding of masculinity. Similar perspectives are also found in Catholic magazines, in which male saints are described as being just as pious and eager to live up to the religious virtues as female saints. But in a Catholic understanding, the question was not about male and female ideals, but about Christian ideals and their absence.

Department/s

Publishing year

2011

Language

English

Pages

165-187

Publication/Series

KADOC Studies on Religion, Culture and Society

Volume

8

Document type

Book chapter

Publisher

Leuven University Press

Topic

  • History

Keywords

  • constructions of masculinity
  • celibacy
  • discursive feminisation
  • obedience
  • Christian virtues
  • Jesuits
  • Catholic mission
  • Barnabites

Status

Published

Project

  • Christian Manliness, a Paradox of Modernity: Men and Religion in a Northern-European Context, 1840 to 1940

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISBN: 9789058678737
  • ISBN: 978-94-6166-428-0