The Cambridge Companion to Puritanism.
Gilpin, W. Clark
The Cambridge Companion to Puritanism. Edited by John Coffey and
Paul C. H. Lira. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. xi+385 pp.
$90.00 cloth; $29.99 paper.
In a chapter on "Puritan Legacies" in The Cambridge
Companion to Puritanism, editor John Coffey notes that long after the
passing of the Puritan movement, generations of both religious folk and
scholars continue to be persuaded that "Puritanism matters"
(340). For these spiritual and the academic students of Puritanism,
Coffey and his co-editor, Paul C. H. Lim, have compiled a reference work
of exceptional scope and balance.
The design of the book is admirable. It begins with five
chronological chapters on the development of English Puritanism,
including Patrick Collinson on "Antipuritanism" and John
Morrill on "The Puritan Revolution." The next section moves
beyond England to chart the movement's history in Scotland,
Ireland, Wales, New England, and Europe, with chapters contributed by
David D. Hall and Margo Todd. The text then proceeds to eight thematic
chapters that include David Como on radical Puritanism, Alexandra
Walsham on popular culture, and Ann Hughes on Puritanism and gender.
Peter Lake concludes the volume with a lucid historiography. I have
taken time to rehearse the table of contents in order to stress two
principal points. First, this cohesive set of essays introduces the
history of Puritanism and alternative perspectives on the movement in a
manner that will give university students--the main audience of the
Cambridge Companion series--a thorough foundation for their own studies.
Furthermore, by effectively situating Puritanism in its distinctive
national and colonial settings, the volume encourages students to adopt
a transatlantic and British perspective rather than focusing solely
either on England or colonial North America. Second, as suggested by the
names I have listed, Coffey and Lim have assembled a group of authors
who are truly the leading scholars of Puritanism over the past half
century. Even without Lake's concluding historiographic essay, the
reader quickly gains a sense of the development of scholarly
interpretation of Puritanism from Max Weber to the current major voices
in the field. In particular, both the text and the footnotes testify to
the immense scholarly debt owed to Patrick Collinson and, especially, to
his classic study of 1967, The Elizabethan Puritan Movement (Berkeley:
University of California Press).
All this is to the good. But, for this reader at least, some
ambiguity remains around the issue of why "Puritanism matters"
for contemporary students and scholars. Beyond its superb summation of a
twentieth-century field of scholarship, does The Cambridge Companion to
Puritanism also suggest important new directions for
research--directions that "matter"? As several of the
contributors observe, much of the energy for the study of Puritanism
down through the 1970s derived from the idea that Puritanism played a
pivotal role in the emergence of the modern world or the modern national
identities of England and the United States. R. H. Tawney, Christopher
Hill, Perry Miller, and Sacvan Bercovitch inspired two full generations
of research in no small measure because they argued, in various ways,
that some understanding of the Puritan movement was constitutive to an
understanding of modernity. The contributing authors have, for solid
historical reasons, backed away from these large claims and the causal
arguments that these claims implied. But the resultant interpretive
modesty leaves the reader unclear why Puritanism "mattered,"
either in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries or today.
The issue of whether "Puritanism matters" also introduces
the closely related problem of what one means by Puritanism. The
tendency of earlier interpretations of Puritanism, in which it was the
vanguard of religious and political modernity, was to stress, at least
tacitly, the internal coherence of a Puritan movement, even when the
interpreters emphasized the change and development of that movement. On
this matter of defining Puritanism, the present group of authors makes a
more clear-cut contribution. From Collinson's opening chapter on
"Antipuritanism" to Dewey Wallace's solid essay on
doctrinal controversy, the chapters consistently describe Puritanism as
constituted less by some internal motive or orientation than by a
shifting collection of opposing religious groups and tendencies:
Catholics, Separatists, Laudian Arminians, and so on. As Lake puts it,
the identities of Puritans and their opponents were mutually constituted
through "processes of political manoeuvre and public debate and
polemic" (364).
If, in order to understand Puritanism in its various forms and
aspects, one must recognize that it was historically constituted by
these contingent struggles, oppositions, and networks of affiliation,
then one wonders whether the route to historical understanding of
Puritanism can ever pass through a Cambridge Companion to Puritanism.
Instead, the unspoken advice of this fascinating volume seems to be that
Puritanism is better understood not on it own but in the contestations
of shifting Christian communities and networks that comprised the wider
history of British Christianity in the transatlantic world.
doi: 10.1017/S0009640709991582
W. Clark Gilpin
University of Chicago