Separatism and Subculture : Boston Catholicism, 1900-1920

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1994-05-01
Publisher(s): Univ of North Carolina Pr
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Summary

Arguing that Catholicism was a central integrating force among different ethnic and class groups, Paula Kane explores the role of religious identity in Boston in the early twentieth century. In Separatism and Subculture she traces the effect of changing class status on religious identity and solidarity, and she delineates the social and cultural meaning of Catholicism in a city where Yankee Protestant nativism persisted even as its hegemony was in decline. While the Catholic Church served as a force for integration and acculturation in Boston, it also provided a distinct subculture for the city's Catholics in order to maintain its influence in the lives of the faithful. By the early twentieth century, Catholics had begun to achieve the economic success that was essential to cultural assimilation. But Church leaderswhile acknowledging the importance of this developmentnevertheless directed Catholics to reject secular modernity for the sanctity of the Church. To implement this strategy of separatist integration, clergy and laity coordinated existing charities, social services, and schools into a specifically Catholic refuge. New institutions emerged as well as did displays of Catholic identity such as parades, public forums, and proselytizing campaigns. Under Archbishop William O'Connell, the Church relied upon its dual insider-outsider image to unify the Catholic community and avert the contradictions of assimilation. These contradictions, says Kane, reflected Catholic ambivalence toward secular culture and concern over social and economic matters, including gender roles and feminism, capitalism, individualism, and the role of the state in philanthropy and social reform. In her analysisof Catholic lay experience, Kane makes use of a wide range of sources, from conversion narratives, fiction, and poetry to the voluminous outpourings of the Catholic press, and she juxtaposes Catholics' responses to various aspects of high culture - including aesthetics, architecture, literature, and medievalism - with their reactions to such popular diversions as dime novels, the stories of the muckraking press, vaudeville, and films.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xi
The Dilemma of Catholic Separatism
Introduction
1(7)
Boston and the Vatican
8(2)
Social Catholicism and Institutionalism
10(3)
Archbishop William O'Connell
13(9)
The Limits of Americanization
The 1908 Catholic Centenary
22(9)
Catholics and ``Boston, 1915''
31(5)
Ford Hall Forum and Democratization
36(2)
Social Work and Immigrant Americanization
38(4)
The Catholic Common Cause Society
42(3)
``Cross and Flag Aloft''
45(3)
Class, Manhood, and Material Success
Religion and Ethnic Assimilation
48(3)
The Boston Catholic Elite
51(24)
``Ishmaelites in America'' : Defining Catholic Manhood
75(14)
Catholic Education and Material Success
89(6)
Lay Associations and Fraternalism
95(9)
A Catholic Critique of Individualism
104(4)
The Functions of Catholic Architecture
A Catholic Antiurban Tradition
108(6)
Architecture as Apologetic
114(6)
The Gothic Ideal
120(8)
The Financing of Churches
128(4)
Catholic Architects and Builders in Boston
132(7)
Growth of Related Industries
139(4)
Architecture as Tradition
143(2)
The Ideology of Catholic Womanhood
The Church's View of Woman
145(8)
Home and the Moral Order
153(4)
From Daughters of Eve to Children of Mary
157(10)
Women and Education
167(9)
``A Properly Guarded Youth'' : Female Advice Literature
176(4)
Female Converts to Catholicism
180(16)
The Ideal Catholic Woman
196(4)
Organizing Catholic Women
Clubwomen and Middle-Class Formation
200(5)
Catholic Women's Societies
205(16)
Professional Laywomen : Two Examples
221(18)
Toward Women's Autonomy: Suffrage, Work, and Social Feminism
239(14)
The Control of Culture
Situating Catholic Culture
253(9)
The Anti-Ugly Crusade in Catholic Aesthetics
262(6)
Against Modernism
268(6)
Production of a Catholic Subculture
274(8)
The Catholic Writer and Publisher
282(7)
Catholic Books and the Market
289(4)
Babylon or Israel? : The Politics of Popular Entertainment
293(5)
Censorship and Culture
298(16)
The Achievement of Separatist Integration
``The Puritan has Passed; The Catholic Remains''
314(11)
Notes 325(52)
References 377(28)
Index 405

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