Extensively revised and updated, this new edition of The debate on the English Reformation combines a discussion of successive historical approaches to the English Reformation with a critical review of recent debates in the area, offering a major contribution to modern historiography as well as to Reformation studies. It explores the way in which successive generations have found the Reformation relevant to their own times and have in the process rediscovered, redefined and rewritten its story. It shows that not only people who called themselves historians but also politicians, ecclesiastics, journalists and campaigners argued about interpretations of the Reformation and the motivations of its principal agents. The author also shows how, in the twentieth century, the debate was influenced by the development of history as a subject and, in the twenty-first century, by state control of the academy. Undergraduates, researchers and lecturers alike will find this an invaluable and essential companion to their studies.
Rosemary O’Day is Emeritus Professor of History at the Open University
Introduction1. Contemporary historiography of the English Reformation, 1525–702. Interpretations of the Reformation from Fuller to Strype3. Historians and contemporary politics: 1780–18504. The Church of England in crisis: the Reformation heritage5. The Tudor revolution in religion: the twentieth-century debate6. The Reformation and the people: Discovery7. The Church: how it changed8. The Debate in the age of peer review9. The Place of the Reformation in modern biography, fiction and the mediaConclusion: Reformation: Reformulation, Reiteration and ReflectionsFurther ReadingName indexSubject index