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law.
ARCHIVING THE “JEWISH INTERNET”: SOME OPENING QUESTIONS I’m not sure how generally familiar you are with Web archiving, but this year marks 25 years since the generally accepted beginning of systematic archiving of the THEOLOGY, PROVIDENCE AND ANGLICAN-METHODIST REUNION: THE. It
was while Michael Ramsey was archbishop of Canterbury that the Church of England tried twice, and failed twice, to agree to reunion with theMethodist church.
THE EDITED COLLECTION: PASTS, PRESENT AND FUTURE The edited collection: pasts, present and future. My little book on The Edited Collection: Pasts, Present and Future is published by Cambridge University Press, priced at £9.99. It is part of the Cambridge Elements series on Publishing and Book Culture. In the last decade and a half, a strong and negative general theory about theedited
LIDDON LECTURE 2020: ‘THEOLOGY, THE THEOLOGIAN AND THE I was delighted to be invited by the Society of the Faith to give the Liddon Lecture for 2020. Like many other things in 2020, it was given online rather than in person in London, and the full lecture is now available on YouTube, along with the lively discussion that ensued. The relationship between theUNGUARDED HOURS
After six years and dozens of posts in my series on fictional clergy, a new record has been set for the most priests in a single novel.In Unguarded Hours, by A.N. Wilson (1978), I counted some ten clergy, plus half a dozen ordinands in theological college, and a wandering bishop.It is to Mar Sylvestrius (Exarch of the Isles, Abbot of Cluny, Elector of the Holy Roman Empire, but otherwise plain TWO PRIESTS IN THE WILDERNESS Two priests in the wilderness. February 26, 2019 peterwebster. Unusually in this series on fictional clergy in twentieth century English fiction, I feature here both an Anglican in England and a Catholic priest in France. They both appear in Rose Macaulay’s The World My Wilderness, first published in 1950. Set in the periodimmediately after
MICHAEL RAMSEY AND ANGLICAN EVANGELICALS: NEW ARTICLE Michael Ramsey and Anglican evangelicals: new article. The pleasure of picking a new book up off the doormat never seems to diminish, and so it is with this new book on Anglican evangelicalism in the twentieth century, in which I have a chapter on Michael Ramsey and evangelicals in the Church of England. ANGLICAN CLERGY IN TWENTIETH CENTURY BRITISH FICTION: AN Anglican clergy in twentieth century British fiction: an open notebook. January 16, 2014 peterwebster. Regular readers may have seen a series of occasional posts on clergy in fiction. I thought it worth noting what this series is, and is not designed to achieve. Firstly,and importantly, I
A REVIEW: ROWAN WILLIAMS, WHY STUDY THE PAST ? Rowan Williams, Why study the past ?The quest for the historical church (London, Darton, Longman & Todd, 2005) [This review appeared in the Bulletin of the Christianity and History Forum some years back, but has not been available online before now; and re-reading both it and the book itself suggests that it might usefully be made available now. It seems to have attracted very little attention WEBSTORY – PETER WEBSTER'S BLOG Welcome. I am an historian, writer and consultant based in the UK. Here you can read news, reviews and long-form writings on my various interests: religion, culture and the arts. My most recent book is on Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts. Christianity and British politics, with a particular interest in religion in Parliament and thelaw.
ARCHIVING THE “JEWISH INTERNET”: SOME OPENING QUESTIONS I’m not sure how generally familiar you are with Web archiving, but this year marks 25 years since the generally accepted beginning of systematic archiving of the THEOLOGY, PROVIDENCE AND ANGLICAN-METHODIST REUNION: THE. It
was while Michael Ramsey was archbishop of Canterbury that the Church of England tried twice, and failed twice, to agree to reunion with theMethodist church.
THE EDITED COLLECTION: PASTS, PRESENT AND FUTURE The edited collection: pasts, present and future. My little book on The Edited Collection: Pasts, Present and Future is published by Cambridge University Press, priced at £9.99. It is part of the Cambridge Elements series on Publishing and Book Culture. In the last decade and a half, a strong and negative general theory about theedited
LIDDON LECTURE 2020: ‘THEOLOGY, THE THEOLOGIAN AND THE I was delighted to be invited by the Society of the Faith to give the Liddon Lecture for 2020. Like many other things in 2020, it was given online rather than in person in London, and the full lecture is now available on YouTube, along with the lively discussion that ensued. The relationship between theUNGUARDED HOURS
After six years and dozens of posts in my series on fictional clergy, a new record has been set for the most priests in a single novel.In Unguarded Hours, by A.N. Wilson (1978), I counted some ten clergy, plus half a dozen ordinands in theological college, and a wandering bishop.It is to Mar Sylvestrius (Exarch of the Isles, Abbot of Cluny, Elector of the Holy Roman Empire, but otherwise plain TWO PRIESTS IN THE WILDERNESS Two priests in the wilderness. February 26, 2019 peterwebster. Unusually in this series on fictional clergy in twentieth century English fiction, I feature here both an Anglican in England and a Catholic priest in France. They both appear in Rose Macaulay’s The World My Wilderness, first published in 1950. Set in the periodimmediately after
MICHAEL RAMSEY AND ANGLICAN EVANGELICALS: NEW ARTICLE Michael Ramsey and Anglican evangelicals: new article. The pleasure of picking a new book up off the doormat never seems to diminish, and so it is with this new book on Anglican evangelicalism in the twentieth century, in which I have a chapter on Michael Ramsey and evangelicals in the Church of England. ANGLICAN CLERGY IN TWENTIETH CENTURY BRITISH FICTION: AN Anglican clergy in twentieth century British fiction: an open notebook. January 16, 2014 peterwebster. Regular readers may have seen a series of occasional posts on clergy in fiction. I thought it worth noting what this series is, and is not designed to achieve. Firstly,and importantly, I
A REVIEW: ROWAN WILLIAMS, WHY STUDY THE PAST ? Rowan Williams, Why study the past ?The quest for the historical church (London, Darton, Longman & Todd, 2005) [This review appeared in the Bulletin of the Christianity and History Forum some years back, but has not been available online before now; and re-reading both it and the book itself suggests that it might usefully be made available now. It seems to have attracted very little attention THE EDITED COLLECTION: PASTS, PRESENT AND FUTURE My little book on The Edited Collection: Pasts, Present and Future is published by Cambridge University Press, priced at £9.99.It is part of the Cambridge Elements series on Publishing and Book Culture. In the last decade and a half, a strong and negative general theory about the edited collection has taken hold in academic life; a pervasive and tenacious set of memes that have lain largely THE CHURCHES AND THE FUTURE OF THEOLOGICAL RESEARCH The churches and the future of theological research. June 24, 2020 peterwebster. Much discussion on Church of England Twitter recently about the theological qualifications of the current bench of bishops in the Church of England, following on from this post by Peter Anthony. Others (in the comments to that post) have dealt with thespecific
WALTER HUSSEY
My study of Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts at St Matthew’s Northampton and Chichester Cathedral, is now published by Palgrave Macmillan. (It's available as an ebook, and hardback or paperback (at £22.99). Each chapter may also be bought singly.) I introduce Hussey here, and there is also a slightly more academicintroduction here.
TOWERS AND NETWORKS: ON THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE Towers and networks: on the differences between the sciences and the humanities. Having worked for several years in interdisciplinary environments, a thing often heard both from humanists and scholars in STEM disciplines is a kind of amiable incomprehension about the way the other works. It crops up in relation to publishing, in theso-called
CLERGY IN BRITISH FICTION After six years and dozens of posts in my series on fictional clergy, a new record has been set for the most priests in a single novel.In Unguarded Hours, by A.N. Wilson (1978), I counted some ten clergy, plus half a dozen ordinands in theological college, and a wandering bishop.It is to Mar Sylvestrius (Exarch of the Isles, Abbot of Cluny, Elector of the Holy Roman Empire, but otherwise plain MARTYRS, MEMORIALS AND MEANING IN PROTESTANT ENGLAND Martyrs, memorials and meaning in Protestant England. Sitting in what William Morris described as ‘a great amphitheatre of chalk hills’, the market town of Lewes is one of Sussex’s particular delights. For all its quiet charm, the town is perhaps best known for its elaborate celebrations of Bonfire Night, during which the several bonfire TWO PRIESTS IN THE WILDERNESS Two priests in the wilderness. February 26, 2019 peterwebster. Unusually in this series on fictional clergy in twentieth century English fiction, I feature here both an Anglican in England and a Catholic priest in France. They both appear in Rose Macaulay’s The World My Wilderness, first published in 1950. Set in the periodimmediately after
ON DIGITISATION AND THE VISIBILITY OF HISTORIC JOURNALS On digitisation and the visibility of historic journals. Here follows a tale of two journals, a cautionary tale of the degree to which the historical record is conditioned by the interaction of technology and the economics of publishing. Firstly, the journal Theology, perhaps the leading general theology journal in the UK. THE VICAR AND THE EXCELLENT WOMEN Mildred Lathbury’s London is small and grey, ‘so very much the wrong side of Victoria station, so definitely not Belgravia’ (ch.1). It is a constrained world, of rationed food that is bland when it comes, of shapeless THE VICAR AND THE RAGGED TROUSERED PHILANTHROPISTS The vicar and the ragged trousered philanthropists. To a greater or lesser extent, all the fictional clergymen in my series so far are caricatures: characters written into a novel as a means of signifying something about their office. Sometimes these characters are given greater room to breathe: an opportunity to reflect on the nature oftheir
WEBSTORY – PETER WEBSTER'S BLOG Welcome. I am an historian, writer and consultant based in the UK. Here you can read news, reviews and long-form writings on my various interests: religion, culture and the arts. My most recent book is on Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts. Christianity and British politics, with a particular interest in religion in Parliament and thelaw.
THEOLOGY, PROVIDENCE AND ANGLICAN-METHODIST REUNION: THE. It
was while Michael Ramsey was archbishop of Canterbury that the Church of England tried twice, and failed twice, to agree to reunion with theMethodist church.
ARCHIVING THE “JEWISH INTERNET”: SOME OPENING QUESTIONS I’m not sure how generally familiar you are with Web archiving, but this year marks 25 years since the generally accepted beginning of systematic archiving of the LIDDON LECTURE 2020: ‘THEOLOGY, THE THEOLOGIAN AND THE I was delighted to be invited by the Society of the Faith to give the Liddon Lecture for 2020. Like many other things in 2020, it was given online rather than in person in London, and the full lecture is now available on YouTube, along with the lively discussion that ensued. The relationship between theWALTER HUSSEY
My study of Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts at St Matthew’s Northampton and Chichester Cathedral, is now published by Palgrave Macmillan. (It's available as an ebook, and hardback or paperback (at £22.99). Each chapter may also be bought singly.) I introduce Hussey here, and there is also a slightly more academicintroduction here.
TOWERS AND NETWORKS: ON THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE Towers and networks: on the differences between the sciences and the humanities. Having worked for several years in interdisciplinary environments, a thing often heard both from humanists and scholars in STEM disciplines is a kind of amiable incomprehension about the way the other works. It crops up in relation to publishing, in theso-called
MICHAEL RAMSEY AND ANGLICAN EVANGELICALS: NEW ARTICLE Michael Ramsey and Anglican evangelicals: new article. The pleasure of picking a new book up off the doormat never seems to diminish, and so it is with this new book on Anglican evangelicalism in the twentieth century, in which I have a chapter on Michael Ramsey and evangelicals in the Church of England. MARTYRS, MEMORIALS AND MEANING IN PROTESTANT ENGLAND Martyrs, memorials and meaning in Protestant England. Sitting in what William Morris described as ‘a great amphitheatre of chalk hills’, the market town of Lewes is one of Sussex’s particular delights. For all its quiet charm, the town is perhaps best known for its elaborate celebrations of Bonfire Night, during which the several bonfire CLERGY IN BRITISH FICTION After six years and dozens of posts in my series on fictional clergy, a new record has been set for the most priests in a single novel.In Unguarded Hours, by A.N. Wilson (1978), I counted some ten clergy, plus half a dozen ordinands in theological college, and a wandering bishop.It is to Mar Sylvestrius (Exarch of the Isles, Abbot of Cluny, Elector of the Holy Roman Empire, but otherwise plain ANGLICAN CLERGY IN TWENTIETH CENTURY BRITISH FICTION: AN Anglican clergy in twentieth century British fiction: an open notebook. January 16, 2014 peterwebster. Regular readers may have seen a series of occasional posts on clergy in fiction. I thought it worth noting what this series is, and is not designed to achieve. Firstly,and importantly, I
WEBSTORY – PETER WEBSTER'S BLOG Welcome. I am an historian, writer and consultant based in the UK. Here you can read news, reviews and long-form writings on my various interests: religion, culture and the arts. My most recent book is on Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts. Christianity and British politics, with a particular interest in religion in Parliament and thelaw.
THEOLOGY, PROVIDENCE AND ANGLICAN-METHODIST REUNION: THE. It
was while Michael Ramsey was archbishop of Canterbury that the Church of England tried twice, and failed twice, to agree to reunion with theMethodist church.
ARCHIVING THE “JEWISH INTERNET”: SOME OPENING QUESTIONS I’m not sure how generally familiar you are with Web archiving, but this year marks 25 years since the generally accepted beginning of systematic archiving of the LIDDON LECTURE 2020: ‘THEOLOGY, THE THEOLOGIAN AND THE I was delighted to be invited by the Society of the Faith to give the Liddon Lecture for 2020. Like many other things in 2020, it was given online rather than in person in London, and the full lecture is now available on YouTube, along with the lively discussion that ensued. The relationship between theWALTER HUSSEY
My study of Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts at St Matthew’s Northampton and Chichester Cathedral, is now published by Palgrave Macmillan. (It's available as an ebook, and hardback or paperback (at £22.99). Each chapter may also be bought singly.) I introduce Hussey here, and there is also a slightly more academicintroduction here.
TOWERS AND NETWORKS: ON THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE Towers and networks: on the differences between the sciences and the humanities. Having worked for several years in interdisciplinary environments, a thing often heard both from humanists and scholars in STEM disciplines is a kind of amiable incomprehension about the way the other works. It crops up in relation to publishing, in theso-called
MICHAEL RAMSEY AND ANGLICAN EVANGELICALS: NEW ARTICLE Michael Ramsey and Anglican evangelicals: new article. The pleasure of picking a new book up off the doormat never seems to diminish, and so it is with this new book on Anglican evangelicalism in the twentieth century, in which I have a chapter on Michael Ramsey and evangelicals in the Church of England. MARTYRS, MEMORIALS AND MEANING IN PROTESTANT ENGLAND Martyrs, memorials and meaning in Protestant England. Sitting in what William Morris described as ‘a great amphitheatre of chalk hills’, the market town of Lewes is one of Sussex’s particular delights. For all its quiet charm, the town is perhaps best known for its elaborate celebrations of Bonfire Night, during which the several bonfire CLERGY IN BRITISH FICTION After six years and dozens of posts in my series on fictional clergy, a new record has been set for the most priests in a single novel.In Unguarded Hours, by A.N. Wilson (1978), I counted some ten clergy, plus half a dozen ordinands in theological college, and a wandering bishop.It is to Mar Sylvestrius (Exarch of the Isles, Abbot of Cluny, Elector of the Holy Roman Empire, but otherwise plain ANGLICAN CLERGY IN TWENTIETH CENTURY BRITISH FICTION: AN Anglican clergy in twentieth century British fiction: an open notebook. January 16, 2014 peterwebster. Regular readers may have seen a series of occasional posts on clergy in fiction. I thought it worth noting what this series is, and is not designed to achieve. Firstly,and importantly, I
PUBLICATIONS
Books and edited collections 2020: The Edited Collection: Pasts, Present and Futures (Cambridge University Press). 2017: Church and Patronage in 20th Century Britain. Walter Hussey and the arts (Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan) 2015: Archbishop Ramsey: the shape of the church [in the Ashgate/Routledge series on the archbishops of Canterbury. ABOUT ME – WEBSTORY A personal blog for Peter Webster. I'm an historian based in London and Chichester, with interests in the history of Christianity in twentieth century Britain, particularly the relation of church, law and state, the religious arts, and evangelicalism. I work at the interface of historical scholarship with digital technologies, with particular interests in digital history, TOWERS AND NETWORKS: ON THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE Towers and networks: on the differences between the sciences and the humanities. Having worked for several years in interdisciplinary environments, a thing often heard both from humanists and scholars in STEM disciplines is a kind of amiable incomprehension about the way the other works. It crops up in relation to publishing, in theso-called
MARTYRS, MEMORIALS AND MEANING IN PROTESTANT ENGLAND Martyrs, memorials and meaning in Protestant England. Sitting in what William Morris described as ‘a great amphitheatre of chalk hills’, the market town of Lewes is one of Sussex’s particular delights. For all its quiet charm, the town is perhaps best known for its elaborate celebrations of Bonfire Night, during which the several bonfire THE CHURCHES AND THE FUTURE OF THEOLOGICAL RESEARCH The churches and the future of theological research. June 24, 2020 peterwebster. Much discussion on Church of England Twitter recently about the theological qualifications of the current bench of bishops in the Church of England, following on from this post by Peter Anthony. Others (in the comments to that post) have dealt with thespecific
THE PANDEMIC AND THE IDEA OF A NATIONAL CHURCH The pandemic has, perhaps not surprisingly, brought out some of the cliches that make discussion of the role of the established church rather difficult. One is the sense (rather fanciful, I would suggest) that the nation, still Anglican at its heart, cries out as one from Bradford to Basingstoke, from Camden to Combe Magna, for thearchbishop
THE LAMBETH CONFERENCE: THEOLOGY, HISTORY, POLITY AND Paul Avis and Benjamin M. Guyer (eds) The Lambeth Conference. Theology, history, polity and purpose London: Bloomsbury/ T & T Clark, 2017 978-0-5676-6231-6 xxi + 437 This year sees the latest instance of the Lambeth Conference, the decennialgathering of the
ON JOINING THE CROWDFUNDING REVOLUTION On joining the crowdfunding revolution. May 19, 2020. October 27, 2020. peterwebster. A question often asked in the ongoing argument about Open Access and academic publishing is ‘what value do publishers add, exactly?’.UNGUARDED HOURS
After six years and dozens of posts in my series on fictional clergy, a new record has been set for the most priests in a single novel.In Unguarded Hours, by A.N. Wilson (1978), I counted some ten clergy, plus half a dozen ordinands in theological college, and a wandering bishop.It is to Mar Sylvestrius (Exarch of the Isles, Abbot of Cluny, Elector of the Holy Roman Empire, but otherwise plain THE VICAR AND THE EXCELLENT WOMEN Mildred Lathbury’s London is small and grey, ‘so very much the wrong side of Victoria station, so definitely not Belgravia’ (ch.1). It is a constrained world, of rationed food that is bland when it comes, of shapeless WEBSTORY – PETER WEBSTER'S BLOG Welcome. I am an historian, writer and consultant based in the UK. Here you can read news, reviews and long-form writings on my various interests: religion, culture and the arts. My most recent book is on Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts. Christianity and British politics, with a particular interest in religion in Parliament and thelaw.
ABOUT ME – WEBSTORY A personal blog for Peter Webster. I'm an historian based in London and Chichester, with interests in the history of Christianity in twentieth century Britain, particularly the relation of church, law and state, the religious arts, and evangelicalism. I work at the interface of historical scholarship with digital technologies, with particular interests in digital history,WALTER HUSSEY
My study of Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts at St Matthew’s Northampton and Chichester Cathedral, is now published by Palgrave Macmillan. (It's available as an ebook, and hardback or paperback (at £22.99). Each chapter may also be bought singly.) I introduce Hussey here, and there is also a slightly more academicintroduction here.
THE EDITED COLLECTION: PASTS, PRESENT AND FUTURE The edited collection: pasts, present and future. My little book on The Edited Collection: Pasts, Present and Future is published by Cambridge University Press, priced at £9.99. It is part of the Cambridge Elements series on Publishing and Book Culture. In the last decade and a half, a strong and negative general theory about theedited
ARCHIVING THE “JEWISH INTERNET”: SOME OPENING QUESTIONS I’m not sure how generally familiar you are with Web archiving, but this year marks 25 years since the generally accepted beginning of systematic archiving of the THEOLOGY, PROVIDENCE AND ANGLICAN-METHODIST REUNION: THE. It
was while Michael Ramsey was archbishop of Canterbury that the Church of England tried twice, and failed twice, to agree to reunion with theMethodist church.
MARTYRS, MEMORIALS AND MEANING IN PROTESTANT ENGLAND Martyrs, memorials and meaning in Protestant England. Sitting in what William Morris described as ‘a great amphitheatre of chalk hills’, the market town of Lewes is one of Sussex’s particular delights. For all its quiet charm, the town is perhaps best known for its elaborate celebrations of Bonfire Night, during which the several bonfire MICHAEL RAMSEY AND ANGLICAN EVANGELICALS: NEW ARTICLE Michael Ramsey and Anglican evangelicals: new article. The pleasure of picking a new book up off the doormat never seems to diminish, and so it is with this new book on Anglican evangelicalism in the twentieth century, in which I have a chapter on Michael Ramsey and evangelicals in the Church of England. WHAT USE IS A PERSONAL TWEET ARCHIVE ? A little while ago I wrote a post about the need to plan for archiving the digital “papers” of historians. In that post I talked about research data (what we used to called “notes”); about the systems that form the bridge between that data and the writing process; and THE VICAR AND THE EXCELLENT WOMEN Mildred Lathbury’s London is small and grey, ‘so very much the wrong side of Victoria station, so definitely not Belgravia’ (ch.1). It is a constrained world, of rationed food that is bland when it comes, of shapeless WEBSTORY – PETER WEBSTER'S BLOG Welcome. I am an historian, writer and consultant based in the UK. Here you can read news, reviews and long-form writings on my various interests: religion, culture and the arts. My most recent book is on Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts. Christianity and British politics, with a particular interest in religion in Parliament and thelaw.
ABOUT ME – WEBSTORY A personal blog for Peter Webster. I'm an historian based in London and Chichester, with interests in the history of Christianity in twentieth century Britain, particularly the relation of church, law and state, the religious arts, and evangelicalism. I work at the interface of historical scholarship with digital technologies, with particular interests in digital history,WALTER HUSSEY
My study of Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts at St Matthew’s Northampton and Chichester Cathedral, is now published by Palgrave Macmillan. (It's available as an ebook, and hardback or paperback (at £22.99). Each chapter may also be bought singly.) I introduce Hussey here, and there is also a slightly more academicintroduction here.
THE EDITED COLLECTION: PASTS, PRESENT AND FUTURE The edited collection: pasts, present and future. My little book on The Edited Collection: Pasts, Present and Future is published by Cambridge University Press, priced at £9.99. It is part of the Cambridge Elements series on Publishing and Book Culture. In the last decade and a half, a strong and negative general theory about theedited
ARCHIVING THE “JEWISH INTERNET”: SOME OPENING QUESTIONS I’m not sure how generally familiar you are with Web archiving, but this year marks 25 years since the generally accepted beginning of systematic archiving of the THEOLOGY, PROVIDENCE AND ANGLICAN-METHODIST REUNION: THE. It
was while Michael Ramsey was archbishop of Canterbury that the Church of England tried twice, and failed twice, to agree to reunion with theMethodist church.
MARTYRS, MEMORIALS AND MEANING IN PROTESTANT ENGLAND Martyrs, memorials and meaning in Protestant England. Sitting in what William Morris described as ‘a great amphitheatre of chalk hills’, the market town of Lewes is one of Sussex’s particular delights. For all its quiet charm, the town is perhaps best known for its elaborate celebrations of Bonfire Night, during which the several bonfire MICHAEL RAMSEY AND ANGLICAN EVANGELICALS: NEW ARTICLE Michael Ramsey and Anglican evangelicals: new article. The pleasure of picking a new book up off the doormat never seems to diminish, and so it is with this new book on Anglican evangelicalism in the twentieth century, in which I have a chapter on Michael Ramsey and evangelicals in the Church of England. WHAT USE IS A PERSONAL TWEET ARCHIVE ? A little while ago I wrote a post about the need to plan for archiving the digital “papers” of historians. In that post I talked about research data (what we used to called “notes”); about the systems that form the bridge between that data and the writing process; and THE VICAR AND THE EXCELLENT WOMEN Mildred Lathbury’s London is small and grey, ‘so very much the wrong side of Victoria station, so definitely not Belgravia’ (ch.1). It is a constrained world, of rationed food that is bland when it comes, of shapelessPUBLICATIONS
Books and edited collections 2020: The Edited Collection: Pasts, Present and Futures (Cambridge University Press). 2017: Church and Patronage in 20th Century Britain. Walter Hussey and the arts (Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan) 2015: Archbishop Ramsey: the shape of the church [in the Ashgate/Routledge series on the archbishops of Canterbury. ARCHIVING THE “JEWISH INTERNET”: SOME OPENING QUESTIONS I’m not sure how generally familiar you are with Web archiving, but this year marks 25 years since the generally accepted beginning of systematic archiving of the TOWERS AND NETWORKS: ON THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE Towers and networks: on the differences between the sciences and the humanities. Having worked for several years in interdisciplinary environments, a thing often heard both from humanists and scholars in STEM disciplines is a kind of amiable incomprehension about the way the other works. It crops up in relation to publishing, in theso-called
CLERGY IN BRITISH FICTION After six years and dozens of posts in my series on fictional clergy, a new record has been set for the most priests in a single novel.In Unguarded Hours, by A.N. Wilson (1978), I counted some ten clergy, plus half a dozen ordinands in theological college, and a wandering bishop.It is to Mar Sylvestrius (Exarch of the Isles, Abbot of Cluny, Elector of the Holy Roman Empire, but otherwise plain ON JOINING THE CROWDFUNDING REVOLUTION On joining the crowdfunding revolution. May 19, 2020. October 27, 2020. peterwebster. A question often asked in the ongoing argument about Open Access and academic publishing is ‘what value do publishers add, exactly?’.MICHAEL RAMSEY
My study of Michael Ramsey, archbishop of Canterbury, is available from Amazon, in hardback, paperback, ebook PDF, ebook Epub. From the reviewers: "This is a book to relish. For all Michael Ramsey fans this is a must-buy." (Robin Gill, Theology) " the best introduction to Michael Ramsey’s archiepiscopacy at Canterbury currently available,and should be
TWO PRIESTS IN THE WILDERNESS Unusually in this series on fictional clergy in twentieth century English fiction, I feature here both an Anglican in England and a Catholic priest in France. They both appear in Rose Macaulay’s The World My Wilderness, first published in 1950.Set in the period immediately after the end of the Second World War, it features three locations, two of which are counterparts in ruin. THE VICAR AND THE EXCELLENT WOMEN Mildred Lathbury’s London is small and grey, ‘so very much the wrong side of Victoria station, so definitely not Belgravia’ (ch.1). It is a constrained world, of rationed food that is bland when it comes, of shapeless ANGLICAN CLERGY IN TWENTIETH CENTURY BRITISH FICTION: AN Anglican clergy in twentieth century British fiction: an open notebook. January 16, 2014 peterwebster. Regular readers may have seen a series of occasional posts on clergy in fiction. I thought it worth noting what this series is, and is not designed to achieve. Firstly,and importantly, I
A REVIEW: ROWAN WILLIAMS, WHY STUDY THE PAST ? Rowan Williams, Why study the past ?The quest for the historical church (London, Darton, Longman & Todd, 2005) [This review appeared in the Bulletin of the Christianity and History Forum some years back, but has not been available online before now; and re-reading both it and the book itself suggests that it might usefully be made available now. It seems to have attracted very little attention WEBSTORY – PETER WEBSTER'S BLOG Welcome. I am an historian, writer and consultant based in the UK. Here you can read news, reviews and long-form writings on my various interests: religion, culture and the arts. My most recent book is on Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts. Christianity and British politics, with a particular interest in religion in Parliament and thelaw.
ABOUT ME – WEBSTORY A personal blog for Peter Webster. I'm an historian based in London and Chichester, with interests in the history of Christianity in twentieth century Britain, particularly the relation of church, law and state, the religious arts, and evangelicalism. I work at the interface of historical scholarship with digital technologies, with particular interests in digital history,WALTER HUSSEY
My study of Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts at St Matthew’s Northampton and Chichester Cathedral, is now published by Palgrave Macmillan. (It's available as an ebook, and hardback or paperback (at £22.99). Each chapter may also be bought singly.) I introduce Hussey here, and there is also a slightly more academicintroduction here.
THE EDITED COLLECTION: PASTS, PRESENT AND FUTURE The edited collection: pasts, present and future. My little book on The Edited Collection: Pasts, Present and Future is published by Cambridge University Press, priced at £9.99. It is part of the Cambridge Elements series on Publishing and Book Culture. In the last decade and a half, a strong and negative general theory about theedited
ARCHIVING THE “JEWISH INTERNET”: SOME OPENING QUESTIONS I’m not sure how generally familiar you are with Web archiving, but this year marks 25 years since the generally accepted beginning of systematic archiving of the THEOLOGY, PROVIDENCE AND ANGLICAN-METHODIST REUNION: THE. It
was while Michael Ramsey was archbishop of Canterbury that the Church of England tried twice, and failed twice, to agree to reunion with theMethodist church.
MARTYRS, MEMORIALS AND MEANING IN PROTESTANT ENGLAND Martyrs, memorials and meaning in Protestant England. Sitting in what William Morris described as ‘a great amphitheatre of chalk hills’, the market town of Lewes is one of Sussex’s particular delights. For all its quiet charm, the town is perhaps best known for its elaborate celebrations of Bonfire Night, during which the several bonfire MICHAEL RAMSEY AND ANGLICAN EVANGELICALS: NEW ARTICLE Michael Ramsey and Anglican evangelicals: new article. The pleasure of picking a new book up off the doormat never seems to diminish, and so it is with this new book on Anglican evangelicalism in the twentieth century, in which I have a chapter on Michael Ramsey and evangelicals in the Church of England. WHAT USE IS A PERSONAL TWEET ARCHIVE ? A little while ago I wrote a post about the need to plan for archiving the digital “papers” of historians. In that post I talked about research data (what we used to called “notes”); about the systems that form the bridge between that data and the writing process; and THE VICAR AND THE EXCELLENT WOMEN Mildred Lathbury’s London is small and grey, ‘so very much the wrong side of Victoria station, so definitely not Belgravia’ (ch.1). It is a constrained world, of rationed food that is bland when it comes, of shapeless WEBSTORY – PETER WEBSTER'S BLOG Welcome. I am an historian, writer and consultant based in the UK. Here you can read news, reviews and long-form writings on my various interests: religion, culture and the arts. My most recent book is on Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts. Christianity and British politics, with a particular interest in religion in Parliament and thelaw.
ABOUT ME – WEBSTORY A personal blog for Peter Webster. I'm an historian based in London and Chichester, with interests in the history of Christianity in twentieth century Britain, particularly the relation of church, law and state, the religious arts, and evangelicalism. I work at the interface of historical scholarship with digital technologies, with particular interests in digital history,WALTER HUSSEY
My study of Walter Hussey, Anglican patron of the arts at St Matthew’s Northampton and Chichester Cathedral, is now published by Palgrave Macmillan. (It's available as an ebook, and hardback or paperback (at £22.99). Each chapter may also be bought singly.) I introduce Hussey here, and there is also a slightly more academicintroduction here.
THE EDITED COLLECTION: PASTS, PRESENT AND FUTURE The edited collection: pasts, present and future. My little book on The Edited Collection: Pasts, Present and Future is published by Cambridge University Press, priced at £9.99. It is part of the Cambridge Elements series on Publishing and Book Culture. In the last decade and a half, a strong and negative general theory about theedited
ARCHIVING THE “JEWISH INTERNET”: SOME OPENING QUESTIONS I’m not sure how generally familiar you are with Web archiving, but this year marks 25 years since the generally accepted beginning of systematic archiving of the THEOLOGY, PROVIDENCE AND ANGLICAN-METHODIST REUNION: THE. It
was while Michael Ramsey was archbishop of Canterbury that the Church of England tried twice, and failed twice, to agree to reunion with theMethodist church.
MARTYRS, MEMORIALS AND MEANING IN PROTESTANT ENGLAND Martyrs, memorials and meaning in Protestant England. Sitting in what William Morris described as ‘a great amphitheatre of chalk hills’, the market town of Lewes is one of Sussex’s particular delights. For all its quiet charm, the town is perhaps best known for its elaborate celebrations of Bonfire Night, during which the several bonfire MICHAEL RAMSEY AND ANGLICAN EVANGELICALS: NEW ARTICLE Michael Ramsey and Anglican evangelicals: new article. The pleasure of picking a new book up off the doormat never seems to diminish, and so it is with this new book on Anglican evangelicalism in the twentieth century, in which I have a chapter on Michael Ramsey and evangelicals in the Church of England. WHAT USE IS A PERSONAL TWEET ARCHIVE ? A little while ago I wrote a post about the need to plan for archiving the digital “papers” of historians. In that post I talked about research data (what we used to called “notes”); about the systems that form the bridge between that data and the writing process; and THE VICAR AND THE EXCELLENT WOMEN Mildred Lathbury’s London is small and grey, ‘so very much the wrong side of Victoria station, so definitely not Belgravia’ (ch.1). It is a constrained world, of rationed food that is bland when it comes, of shapelessPUBLICATIONS
Books and edited collections 2020: The Edited Collection: Pasts, Present and Futures (Cambridge University Press). 2017: Church and Patronage in 20th Century Britain. Walter Hussey and the arts (Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan) 2015: Archbishop Ramsey: the shape of the church [in the Ashgate/Routledge series on the archbishops of Canterbury. ARCHIVING THE “JEWISH INTERNET”: SOME OPENING QUESTIONS I’m not sure how generally familiar you are with Web archiving, but this year marks 25 years since the generally accepted beginning of systematic archiving of the TOWERS AND NETWORKS: ON THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE Towers and networks: on the differences between the sciences and the humanities. Having worked for several years in interdisciplinary environments, a thing often heard both from humanists and scholars in STEM disciplines is a kind of amiable incomprehension about the way the other works. It crops up in relation to publishing, in theso-called
CLERGY IN BRITISH FICTION After six years and dozens of posts in my series on fictional clergy, a new record has been set for the most priests in a single novel.In Unguarded Hours, by A.N. Wilson (1978), I counted some ten clergy, plus half a dozen ordinands in theological college, and a wandering bishop.It is to Mar Sylvestrius (Exarch of the Isles, Abbot of Cluny, Elector of the Holy Roman Empire, but otherwise plain ON JOINING THE CROWDFUNDING REVOLUTION On joining the crowdfunding revolution. May 19, 2020. October 27, 2020. peterwebster. A question often asked in the ongoing argument about Open Access and academic publishing is ‘what value do publishers add, exactly?’.MICHAEL RAMSEY
My study of Michael Ramsey, archbishop of Canterbury, is available from Amazon, in hardback, paperback, ebook PDF, ebook Epub. From the reviewers: "This is a book to relish. For all Michael Ramsey fans this is a must-buy." (Robin Gill, Theology) " the best introduction to Michael Ramsey’s archiepiscopacy at Canterbury currently available,and should be
TWO PRIESTS IN THE WILDERNESS Unusually in this series on fictional clergy in twentieth century English fiction, I feature here both an Anglican in England and a Catholic priest in France. They both appear in Rose Macaulay’s The World My Wilderness, first published in 1950.Set in the period immediately after the end of the Second World War, it features three locations, two of which are counterparts in ruin. THE VICAR AND THE EXCELLENT WOMEN Mildred Lathbury’s London is small and grey, ‘so very much the wrong side of Victoria station, so definitely not Belgravia’ (ch.1). It is a constrained world, of rationed food that is bland when it comes, of shapeless ANGLICAN CLERGY IN TWENTIETH CENTURY BRITISH FICTION: AN Anglican clergy in twentieth century British fiction: an open notebook. January 16, 2014 peterwebster. Regular readers may have seen a series of occasional posts on clergy in fiction. I thought it worth noting what this series is, and is not designed to achieve. Firstly,and importantly, I
A REVIEW: ROWAN WILLIAMS, WHY STUDY THE PAST ? Rowan Williams, Why study the past ?The quest for the historical church (London, Darton, Longman & Todd, 2005) [This review appeared in the Bulletin of the Christianity and History Forum some years back, but has not been available online before now; and re-reading both it and the book itself suggests that it might usefully be made available now. It seems to have attracted very little attentionSkip to content
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PETER WEBSTER'S BLOGWELCOME
I am an historian, writer and consultant based in the UK. Here you can read news, reviews and long-form writings on my variousinterests:
* religion, culture and the arts. My most recent book is on Walter Hussey , Anglican patron ofthe arts.
* Christianity and British politics,
with a particular interest in religion in Parliament and the law * the worldwide Anglican church. My study of Michael Ramsey,
archbishop of Canterbury, was published in 2015. * the history of evangelicalism * digital scholarship and the making and use of digital archives, and Web history and Web archives in particular My consultancy, Webster Research and Consulting helps understand what users need from digital resources, and works with technologists to meetthose needs.
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