Front cover image for Voracious idols and violent hands : iconoclasm in Reformation Zurich, Strasbourg, and Basel

Voracious idols and violent hands : iconoclasm in Reformation Zurich, Strasbourg, and Basel

"This book takes up iconoclasm, that mode by which hundreds of ordinary people entered into "Reformation," in three important towns of the 1520s. It seeks to recover the agency of ordinary people in Reformation and to discern their theology in their acts. In part, its purpose is to suggest ways of excavating the meaning of the acts of those who did not have access to more protected and fixed forms of communication - that is, printed texts and images. In part, it illuminates the meaning of images for ordinary Christians in the sixteenth century." "Voracious Idols and Violent Hands posits a vision of "Reformation" as a dialogue in which different persons "spoke" through different forms, according to their education and social and political place. Each brought his or her vision of true Christianity to that dialogue, and articulated that vision in the cultural form he or she found most accessible: theologians in sermons and treatises, magistrates in laws and their enforcement, and ordinary people - the focus of this volume - in acts."--BOOK JACKET
Print Book, English, 1999
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1999
xii, 205 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
9780521663434, 9780521472227, 0521663431, 0521472229
42621704
Introduction; 1. The images in the churches; 2. Zurich; 3. Strasbourg; 4. Basel; Conclusion.
archive.org The digital version of the 1st edition is available to borrow at the Internet Archive. Registration required.