• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Why Relationships Matter: Sisters, Bishops, and the History of Catholicism in the United States
  • Beteiligte: McGuinness, Margaret M.
  • Erschienen: Project MUSE, 2014
  • Erschienen in: The Catholic Historical Review, 100 (2014) 2, Seite vi-242
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.1353/cat.2014.0125
  • ISSN: 1534-0708
  • Schlagwörter: General Arts and Humanities
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  • Beschreibung: Histories of women religious in the United States no longer follow a pattern that extols Superior Generals and presidents while ignoring the collective work of the congregation. In her presidential address to the American Catholic Historical Association, the author offers a reminder that despite this shift in historical research, we still have much to learn about the most well-known American sisters. Focusing on Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton, Theodore Guérin, and Katharine Drexel—all of whom have been canonized—she examines their relationships with bishops, both collegial and adversarial, as a way to further understanding about the place of women religious in U.S. Catholic history.