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Religiosity in Middle Adulthood Among Alumni of U.S. Jesuit Higher Education: Strength of Religious Faith and the Role of Undergraduate High Impact PracticesCownie, Charles January 2020 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Karen Arnold / U.S. Jesuit Catholic universities are called not only to be excellent academic institutions but also to carry out a mission to educate and form “students in such a way and in order that they may become men and women of faith and of service to their communities” (Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities, 2012, p. 3). This formative goal calls Jesuit institutions to engage in practices that provide students with experiences that support the continued growth of a strong and engaged religious faith. Based on the American Association of Colleges & Universities’ nine high impact practices and seven additional Jesuit Catholic high impact practices, this study investigated the relationship between individuals’ engagement in these specific high impact practices and their middle adult religiosity or strength of religious faith. In this research, 483 alumni from 16 Jesuit colleges and universities reported high levels of religiosity in middle adulthood, as measured by the Santa Clara Strength of Religious Faith Questionnaire (Plante & Boccaccini, 1997b). Descriptive statistics and OLS multiple regression analysis showed a statistically significant, positive relationship between adult religiosity and participants’ engagement in Jesuit Catholic high impact practices as undergraduates, both across practices and specifically associated with participation in the Jesuit practice of the Examen of Conscience. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2020. / Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. / Discipline: Educational Leadership and Higher Education.
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Priestly plantations: an archaeology of capitalism and community in British North AmericaMasur, Laura Elizabeth 07 December 2019 (has links)
This dissertation uses historical and archaeological evidence to examine changes in the landscape of two Middle Atlantic Jesuit plantations in order to understand the role that these places played in the development of rural communities. Between 1637 and 1919, the Society of Jesus established and managed eleven large estates, which provided financial support for Indian missions, colleges, and the infrastructure of the Catholic Church in America. These sites sat at the intersection of the capitalist American plantation system and the Jesuits’ ever-expanding network of missions. Religious goals and their means of economic support became irrevocably entangled in ways that supported the development of tightly-knit Catholic communities and led to the plantations’ economic failure in the mid-nineteenth century.
Using archival research, archaeological survey, and the contextual analysis of Roman Catholic devotional objects, this dissertation examines how processes of landscape transformation on Jesuit estates structured and displayed social relations among surrounding communities. Analysis focuses on changes in agriculture, labor systems, built landscapes, and socioeconomic networks at two specific estates, St. Inigoes in southern Maryland and Conewago in central Pennsylvania. By examining the spatial distribution of structures and activity areas in an archaeological GIS, contextualized with historical data on agricultural production, laborers, and Jesuit finances, this dissertation shows how the plantations were representative of local agricultural and economic trends. Their religious orientation, however, made the properties distinctive, shaping the development of human relationships and creating subtle differences in the ways that people interacted with material culture. By the end of the nineteenth century, plantations were remembered as sacred places, and as the home of supernatural presences.
Devotional artifacts excavated on Jesuit plantations and nearby sites provide evidence of spiritual beliefs, community networks, and missionary outreach. These objects, used within the context of community life, mediated relationships between humans and deities. Their presence at seventeenth- and eighteenth-century American Indian sites demonstrates connections between the plantations and the Jesuits’ Indian missions in Maryland and Pennsylvania. Religious material culture from nineteenth- and twentieth-century African-American sites on and near Jesuit properties shows the tenacity of Black Catholicism despite slavery, racism, and segregation within the Church. / 2021-12-06T00:00:00Z
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“Very Advantageous Beginnings”: Jesuit Conversion, Secular Interests, and the Legacy of Port Royal, 1608–1620Wachtel, Joseph Robert 14 August 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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A Dizzying Splendor : Experience and Emotion in the Ceiling Frescos of Il Gesù and Sant’IgnazioJansson, Anna January 2018 (has links)
The thesis is a performative and sensuous study based on pre-iconographic descriptions of the formal features in the ceiling paintings The Triumph of the Name of Jesus (1674-1679) by Giovanni Battista Gaulli (called Baciccio, 1639-1709) in Il Gesù, Rome and Glorification of Sant'Ignazio (1685-1694) by Andrea Pozzo (1642-1709) in Sant'Ignazio, Rome. By tracing effects likely perceived by different visitors through eyesight and the movement in the room, the aim is to suggest why these artworks are perceived as powerful. The results show that the power of the illusion in both paintings lie in the questioning of elements a visitor will know devoid of iconography or theological understanding of the narrative. Through elements a visitor will recognize and have bodily and sensuous experience of, different features will make the visitor question reality related to painted fiction. This experience and how it affects a visitor is why the artworks hold a central place in the art historical view on the Baroque, and further, Jesuit Style. The method for this analysis is pre-iconographic descriptions of all the figures in the vaulted naves, that are analyzed by the author using performative theory and a sensuous perspective as the theoretical framework. The research question for the thesis is: How is a visitor affected by the formal features in "The Triumph of the Name of Jesus" by Giovanni Battista Gaulli and "Glorification of Sant'Ignazio" by Andrea Pozzo?
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By Virtue of the Senses: Ignatian Aestheticism and the Origins of Sense Application in the First Decades of the Gesù in RomeClines, Robert John 12 August 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Going forth and setting the world on fire: assessing how St. Paul’s High School students are fulfilling the characteristics of the profile of the graduate at graduationStadnyk, Jarrod 19 June 2015 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to assess how graduating students at St. Paul’s High School are fulfilling the characteristics of the Jesuit Secondary Education Association’s Profile of the Graduate at Graduation. These characteristics include being open to growth, intellectually competent, religious, loving, and committed to doing justice. While these five characteristics are identified as desired traits for graduates of St. Paul’s, there has not yet been an evaluation process undertaken in order to gauge student attainment of these characteristics. The methodology involved a document analysis, a collection of data from the sixty-two JSEA schools’ websites, and four interviews with St. Paul’s graduates from 2014. The three-fold approach allowed for a deep understanding of the context and experience of the Profile. This allowed for a reflection that showed there is a successful outline for creating a culture where the Graduate at Graduation is central to the mission of JSEA schools, which in turn makes the characteristics attainable.
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Consolation in action: the Jesuit Refugee Service and the ministry of accompanimentO'Brien, Kevin January 2006 (has links)
The story of JRS as a Jesuit ministry -- Accompaniment as the practice of solidarity -- JRS and the Spiritual Exercises -- JRS as an embodiment of the biblical virtue of hospitality. / Thesis (S.T.L.)--Weston Jesuit School of Theology, 2006. / Kevin O'Brien. / Bibliography: leaves 102-105.
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By virtue of the senses Ignatian aestheticism and the origins of sense application in the first decades of the Gesù in Rome /Clines, Robert John. January 2009 (has links)
Title from first page of PDF document. Includes bibliographical references (p. 69-73).
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Georg Joseph Vogler (1749-1814) and His Jesuit-Influenced "System" of HarmonyDonley, Douglas Michael 08 1900 (has links)
This dissertation reexamines the music-theoretical writing of Georg Jospeh Vogler (1749-1814) in light of his educational background. His system, which is often characterized as "awkward" or "self-contradictory," is actually indicative of the rationalist/humanist preferences of Vogler's main source of training: the Jesuit Order. I argue that Vogler's theories and compositional style have been marginalized, partially due to their incompatibility with the more prevalent systems of his era, which were predominantly based in empirical modes of thought.
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Un jésuite à la croisée de deux cultures : le rôle du père Joseph-Marie Amiot (1718-1793) comme intermédiaire culturel entre la Chine et la France / A jesuit between two cultures : the role of Joseph-Marie Amiot (1718-1793) as a cultural intermediary between China and FranceLong, Yun 14 May 2010 (has links)
Cette thèse, qui relève des études de réception, a pour objectif, en s’appuyant sur une étude contextuelle, traductologique et imagologique, d’analyser le rôle joué par le P. Joseph-Marie Amiot ( 1718-1793) dans les relations culturelles entre la Chine et la France. Le P. Amiot est une figure emblématique de l’action des jésuites en Chine au 18e siècle. En réexaminant ses écrits, ses traductions et sa correspondance avec les savants d’Occident, la thèse cherche à réévaluer sa place dans l’histoire des échanges culturels entre la Chine et l’Occident. Il s’agit, en se penchant sur l’identité complexe d’Amiot, de reconsidérer ce qu’il hérite de la tradition jésuite, d’étudier l’évolution de son identité au contact de l’autre et d’apprécier l’impact de son identité complexe sur ses travaux de recherche, afin de faire émerger le sens de l’image qu’il peint de la Chine. / The aim of this dissertation is to determine the role played by Joseph-Marie Amiot (1718-1793), a representative 18th century Jesuit in China, in cultural relations between China and the West. Its methodological basis is translation studies and imagology. It examines the historical context, Amiot’s translations and his correspondence with Western scholars. It examines Amiot’s complicated cultural identity, in order to understand the influence of the Jesuit tradition on his thinking and the transformation of his cultural identity through constant contact with another tradition and to trace the impact of his complex cultural identity on his work, and thus to draw out the meaning of the picture he painted of China.
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