Models of charitable care Catholic nuns and children in their care in Amsterdam, 1852-2002 /
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Corporate Author: | |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English Dutch |
Published: |
Leiden ; Boston :
Brill,
2008.
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Series: | Brill's series in church history ;
d. 33. Brill's series in church history. Religious history and culture series ; v. 1. |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
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Table of Contents:
- Introduction
- History of the problem
- A history of care
- Charity as a historical care practice
- History and ethics
- Care and faith
- Method and purpose
- Definitions of care
- Caring for roosje
- Reconstruction of a life story
- Tribute to a mother
- Construction of a complaint
- An appropriate and yet contestable judgement on care
- Men in association : class and charity
- Catholic care provision in Amsterdam
- Bishop van Vree
- Father Frentrop, Doctor Cramer and their association of municence
- Father Hesseveld, a secular priest
- Activities of the in terms of care
- An instrumental model of charity
- Ladies and housemaids : gender and charity Catholic caring women in historiography
- Education for girls
- The servants' issue
- Beyond the thesis of the 'civilisation offensive'
- Gender, class, and religion
- Powerful and empowering care : confession and charity
- Approach and definitions
- Benevolence as both care and power
- Humanising Protestantism
- Prison reform by Fry
- Butler's dedication to prostitutes
- Influence of Fry and Butler on the Netherlands
- The inner mission movement
- Conceptual comments
- From the viewpoint of care receivers
- Evelina's memoirs
- The very beginning
- The arrival of Mietje Stroot
- A controversial first communion
- Institutional expansion
- Nursemaids become real sisters
- A charitable care practice experienced from within
- Civilisation offensive, charitable solidarity, or caring power
- Tronto's fourth phase revised : two responses to care
- Care leavers and their opposite judgements
- The care vision in the normative texts
- Normative writings and daily life
- History of the church and history of religion
- Principles and a name
- The rule
- Instructions for the upbringing of the children
- The constitutions of 1882
- The sisterly care vision : a referential and a replacement view
- The purpose of the congregation in terms of care solidarity with strangers because of metaphorical kinship
- Caring for the children of God.