Creed and Culture: The Place of English-speaking Catholics in Canadian Society, 1750-1930

Front Cover
Terrence Murphy, Gerald John Stortz
McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 1993 - Religion - 253 pages
The essays in Creed and Culture combine narrative elements with historical analysis to examine the experience of English-speaking Catholics in the light of social categories such as ethnicity, gender, and class. The Catholicism of English Canada is set in context by comparisons with broader Canadian developments and with the history of Catholicism in the English-speaking world. The authors discuss not only institutional history and church-state relations but also popular piety and lay involvement in religious affairs. The complexity and diversity of the experience of anglophone Catholics is highlighted through accounts of relations with their French-speaking counterparts and Protestant compatriots, European Catholic immigrants, and ecclesiastical authorities in Quebec, Ireland, Scotland, and Rome.
 

Contents

Illustrations follow page xl
vii
EnglishFrench Relations in the Canadian Catholic
3
From the British Conquest
25
Catholicism and Colonial Policy in Newfoundland 1779
69
The Policy of Rome towards the EnglishSpeaking
100
The Struggle
126
The Growth of Roman Catholic Institutions in
152
John Joseph Lynch and Irish
171
Womens Confraternities
185
Torontos EnglishSpeaking Catholics Immigration
204
Index
247
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information