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The period between 1857 and 1957 saw a transformation in Anglican sexual understanding when the established church negotiated substantial new normative interpretations of marriage, sexuality, citizenship, and priesthood. Timothy Jones demonstrates how the introduction of female voices into the previously exclusively male spheres of power transformed understandings of gender. He also delineates the impact of the Anglo-Catholic revival on Anglican sexual culture, in particular, the significance of catholic sacramentality on understandings of the relationship between the sexual and the spiritual. Sexual Politics in the Church of England exposes a surprisingly dynamic and dialogical relationship between theology, feminism, and the new sexual sciences that resists the teleologies of secularisation that dominate the histories of sexuality and Christianity in Britain. The story of Anglican sexual politics told in this book firmly rebuts contemporary notions of the Church as an inevitably reactionary institution. On the contrary, it reveals the Church's historic capacity to renegotiate gender and sexual ideologies, and shows how it was often at the forefront of sexual change in British society.
Timothy Jones is lecturer in history and co-director of the Centre for Gender Studies in Wales at the University of Glamorgan. From July 2012 he will also hold an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award at La Trobe University, Melbourne.
Introduction: Anglican Gender Trouble ; 1. Marriage and Equality ; 2. Women Religious ; 3. Sex and Suffrage ; 4. Subordination and Priesthood ; 5. Contraception, Sex, and Pleasure ; 6. Celibacy and Homosexuality ; Conclusion: Anglican Sexual Politics ; Bibliography ; Index
The historical insights in this volume are essential context for our contemporary debates. They remind us, most of all, of the need always to argue clearly and directly from Scripture, not from the blinkered cultural assumptions of our own generation.