Apologia Pro Vita Sua by John Henry Cardinal Newman
The present edition stresses the literary, humanistic, and religious power of the Apologia, Newman's personal development, and the progress of the Oxford Movement.
Students will be able to place the Apologia in its proper intellectual context by examining it alongside other important documents from the Newman-Kingsley controversy included in this volume: correspondence: Kingsley's pamphlet, What, Then, Does Dr. Newman Mean?; Newman's pamphlets Mr. Kingsley's Mode of Disputation and True Mode of Meeting Mr. Kingsley; and Newman's two Appendices of 1866.
The origin of the Apologia, its contemporary reception, and its present critical fortunes are discussed in studies by Martin J. Svaglic, Walter E. Houghton, Vincent Ferrer Blehl, Lewis E. Gates, Robert A. Colby, Leonard W. Deen, and David J. DeLaura.
A Bibliography is included.
Students will be able to place the Apologia in its proper intellectual context by examining it alongside other important documents from the Newman-Kingsley controversy included in this volume: correspondence: Kingsley's pamphlet, What, Then, Does Dr. Newman Mean?; Newman's pamphlets Mr. Kingsley's Mode of Disputation and True Mode of Meeting Mr. Kingsley; and Newman's two Appendices of 1866.
The origin of the Apologia, its contemporary reception, and its present critical fortunes are discussed in studies by Martin J. Svaglic, Walter E. Houghton, Vincent Ferrer Blehl, Lewis E. Gates, Robert A. Colby, Leonard W. Deen, and David J. DeLaura.
A Bibliography is included.