军队风格,我们前进:1946-1948 年前往韦泽莱和沃尔辛厄姆的十字架朝圣活动中的战争与和平

IF 0.2 2区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY
Kathryn Hurlock
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文分析了 1946 年至 1948 年间前往韦泽莱和沃辛汉姆的十字架朝圣活动。这些朝圣活动旨在实现和平、忏悔与和解,而当时共产主义正在抬头,人们担心战争会卷土重来,核威胁真实存在。战后天主教的这些宗教朝圣活动包括几个分队(或站),与 1918 年后前往战场和墓地的 "世俗 "朝圣活动形成鲜明对比。然而,由于退伍军人的大量参与,以及他们的组织、领导和表达,这些朝圣活动保留了浓厚的军事元素。本文认为,朝圣活动为退伍朝圣者提供了一个以直接精神行动的形式继续服役的机会,他们在朝圣的背景下利用自己的战时经验来完成这些具有身体挑战性的旅程。研究还将探讨为战时行为赎罪的更广泛目标,以及朝圣者所经过的社区对他们的接待方式。尽管由于其新颖性和复杂性而最终难以为继,但这些朝圣活动为军事预防性朝圣活动奠定了基础,为精神和世俗问题提供了一个出口,并在第二次世界大战结束后的几年中以积极的姿态展现了天主教徒(尤其是英国天主教徒)的风采。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Army style, we marched: War and peace in the cross-carrying pilgrimages to Vézelay and Walsingham, 1946-1948
This article analyses the cross-carrying pilgrimages to Vézelay and Walsingham, staged between 1946 and 1948. These were aimed at achieving peace, penance, and reconciliation at a time when communism was on the rise, there were fears that war would return, and the nuclear threat was real. Encompassing several contingents (or Stations), these religious post-war Catholic pilgrimages stand in contrast to the ‘secular’ pilgrimages to battlefields and cemeteries after 1918. Yet they retained a strong military element because of the substantial involvement of veterans, and their organisation, leadership and articulation. This article argues that the pilgrimages gave veteran pilgrims a chance to continue their service in the form of direct spiritual action, utilising their wartime experiences in the context of pilgrimage in order to conduct these physically challenging journeys. It will also explore the wider aims of atoning for wartime actions, and the ways in which the pilgrims were received by the communities they passed through. Whilst ultimately unsustainable due to their novelty and complexity, they laid a foundation for military-penitential pilgrimages, provided an outlet for spiritual and worldly concerns, and presented Catholics (especially in Britain) in a positive light in the years immediately after the Second World War.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: British Catholic History (formerly titled Recusant History) acts as a forum for innovative, vibrant, transnational, inter-disciplinary scholarship resulting from research on the history of British and Irish Catholicism at home and throughout the world. BCH publishes peer-reviewed original research articles, review articles and shorter reviews of works on all aspects of British and Irish Catholic history from the 15th Century up to the present day. Central to our publishing policy is an emphasis on the multi-faceted, national and international dimensions of British Catholic history, which provide both readers and authors with a uniquely interesting lens through which to examine British and Atlantic history. The journal welcomes contributions on all approaches to the Catholic experience.
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