Protestant Bodies
Religious worship is an embodied act, consisting not of words alone, but of words and gestures. But what did early modern English Protestants think they were doing when they went through the motions of worship? In Protestant Bodies, Arnold Hunt argues that the English Reformation was a gestural reformation that redefined the postures and motions of the body. Drawing on a rich array of primary sources, he shows how gestures inherited from the medieval liturgy took on new meanings within a drastically altered ritual landscape, and became central to the enforcement of religious uniformity in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Protestant Bodies presents a challenging new interpretation of the English Reformation as a series of experiments in shaping and remaking the body, both individual and collective, with consequences that still persist today.
- Argues that English Protestantism was a thoroughly embodied religion in which gestures were central to religious experience
- Reconstructs the experience of worship in the early modern period
- Situates early modern debates over ritual in an extended timeline, with reference to modern controversies such as taking the knee
Product details
February 2025Hardback
9781108841719
371 pages
229 × 152 mm
Not yet published - available from February 2025
Table of Contents
- Introduction: windows in the heart
- 1. Passion and persuasion: gesture in the pulpit
- 2. Repentance: penance and reconciliation
- 3. Subjection: bowing at the name of Jesus
- 4. Blessing and protection: the sign of the cross
- 5. Deference and civility: the gestures of hat honour
- 6. Reverence: bowing to the altar
- Conclusion: a death of gestures?