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THEO3811: Tractarians and Modernists: Catholic Retrievals

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Type Open
Level 3
Credits 20
Availability Not available in 2023/24
Module Cap None.
Location Durham
Department Theology and Religion

Prerequisites

  • None

Corequisites

  • None

Excluded Combinations of Modules

  • None

Aims

  • to introduce students to two formative movements in the Churches of England and Rome in the long nineteenth century (1789-1914), and to develop critical thinking about the issues that prompted and were developed by these movements. The Oxford and Catholic Modernist movements are often viewed as antithetical: the first rejecting the present, the second embracing it. But such a contrast is too simple, and one might almost proffer the reverse in regard to the Oxford Movement on the one hand, and of Roman Catholic Modernism on the other. In truth, both addressed present concerns and both were forms of retrieval. Through reading key thinkers in both movements, this module aims to interrogate the relationship between Catholicism and modernity.

Content

  • reading primary texts by key Tractarians and Modernists John Keble, Edward Pusey, John Henry Newman; Friedrich von Hgel, Alfred Loisy, George Tyrrell and of other significant but less prominent authors Christina Rossetti, Josephine Hope, Maude Petre. Through reading such works and relevant secondary literature the module will address the relationships between such topics as stability and change, scripture and tradition, community and individual, authority and conscience, faith and reason, prayer and mysticism, theology and other disciplines.

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:

  • the history of both movements, their beginnings, development and ending, and debates about these; the concerns, concepts and arguments that these movements developed.

Subject-specific Skills:

  • understanding the development of theological ideas in historical contextthe social, personal and intellectual factors that affect and effect thoughtand an ability to critically discuss, assess and present such ideas in their 2 original nineteenth-century context and in relation to present arguments and discussions.

Key Skills:

  • ability to research and read primary texts, distinguishing between their initial meaning and reception and their contemporary import; ability to address theological ideas and arguments through historical narrative, to present such complex interrogations through careful and compelling prose.

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • twenty lecture/seminars of ninety minutes each will enable appropriate teaching and learning, with the ratio of lecturing to discussion varying from week to week depending on the need to impart knowledge, focus attention, steer research, engage students in the detailed reading and analysis of specific texts. Summative essays will enable students to develop and demonstrate, at sufficient length, their knowledge of the Tractarian and Modernist movements and their proficiency in subject and key skills.

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

ActivityNumberFrequencyDurationTotalMonitored
Seminars20Weekly1.5 Hours30 
Preparation170 
Total200 

Summative Assessment

Component: Summative Word Essay 1Component Weighting: 40%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Essay 12500100
Component: Summative Word Essay 2Component Weighting: 60%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Essay 22500100 

Formative Assessment

Seminar discussion; feedback on the first summative essay.

More information

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