Dear Mikkel,
One book you might add to the list which I find very instructive, and
which I often recommend to students is:
Chris and Rosalind Brooke, Popular Religion in the Middle Ages.
On the more methodological problems involved with the concept of
"popular religion", I remember a plenary address by father Boyle, now
some years ago (1994 or 1995) at the Medieval Conference in Leeds. I
don't know if that was ever published.
bests,
FvL
Frans van Liere
Department of History, Calvin College
3201 Burton Street SE
Grand Rapids, MI 49506
e-mail: [log in to unmask]
http://www.calvin.edu/academic/history/vlieref.htm
>>> [log in to unmask] 04/17/00 10:09PM >>>
Please let me introduce myself with a few words:
I am a history student from the university of Aarhus, Denmark.
I have spent five terms studying theology, however my devotion to the
history of the medieval church convinced me that I should change for
history.
This year I am making a study of the tension between the institutional
and
the popular religion in medieval Europe: a field of study almost
ignored by
danish medieval research until recently.
So far my books have been by R.N. Swanson, John Shinners, R.W.
Southern, B.
Hamilton, Per Ingesman, Lars Bisgaard and others.
Thank you,
Mikkel Bencke
Aarhus, Denmark
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