Susannah Heschel on the Reformation’s Troubling Legacy “Our Volk, which stands above all else in a struggle against the satanic powers of world
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David Lyle Jeffrey on Translating the Bible in the Reformation The extraordinary popular excitement produced by the first printed vernacular translations of the
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Carl R. Trueman on the reformer’s legacy Does Luther matter? And if so, why? In this 500th-anniversary year of Luther’s 95 Theses against
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Bruce Gordon on the 500th Anniversary of the Movement The Reformation was a revolution that created a new form of Christianity. What emerged
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Joseph Leo Koerner on Art and the Reformation We in the field of Northern Renaissance art have hardly finished celebrating one big anniversary,
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On the Unbroken Tradition of White Supremacy in American Politics: A Review of Ta-Nehisi Coates’ We Were Eight Years in Power I’m blacker than midnight
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Anti-Judaism and the Talmud in Medieval French Society The thirteenth century was a tumultuous time for the Jews of France. New regulations limited
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A review of Judith H. Anderson’s Light and Death: Figuration in Spenser, Kepler, Donne, Milton. In 1959, a British novelist and chemist named
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Clio Doyle reviews Claire Preston’s The Poetics of Scientific Investigation in Seventeenth-Century England Science was everywhere in the seventeenth century, especially in literature.
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