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The pastor in print
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21 June 2022

HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / Tudor & Elizabethan Era (1485-1603), European history: Reformation, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / Stuart Era (1603-1714), RELIGION / Christian Church / History, LITERARY CRITICISM / Modern / 17th Century, History of religion
'Deeply grounded in manuscript research at the Beinecke Library at Yale, the Bodleian, British Library, the National Archives, Cambridge University, Chetham's Library Manchester and the Lincolnshire and Somerset Record Offices as well as in an enormous number of late sixteenth and early seventeenth-century printed texts it seems no stone has been left unturned. The long list of secondary sources – and Tan's active engagement with them in the body of the book – proclaims a comprehensive and up-to-date awareness; the full bibliography runs to sixteen pages of dense print.'
Literature & History
Introduction: Ministers and media
Part I: Religious goals: pastoral approaches to devotion, vocation, and print
1 The ubiquity of ‘the devotional’
2 The making of a pastor-author
3 The call to preach and the question of printed sermons
Part II: Audiences: imagining and fostering relationships with readers
4 If you learn nothing else: catechisms and the question of the fundamentals of the faith
5 Different audiences, different messages: explication and implication in anti-Catholic publications
6 A bit of parish trouble and a manual on giving: self-representation to insiders and outsiders
Part III: Innovation: Adapting content, genre, and format
7 A trial, a guide for jurors, and an allegory: one experience inspiring generically divergent publications
8 A puritan pastor-author in the 1630s: tailoring the presentation of theological content
9 ‘That all the Lord’s people could prophesy’: innovating in the reference genre (and turning against episcopacy?)
10 The paradigm of the ‘pastor-author’ beyond Bernard
Index