The Controversial Thomas More
Politics, Polemics, and Prison Writings
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Notre Dame Press
Publishing:15th Apr '25
£29.99
This title is due to be published on 15th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£27.99(9780268042110)
The Controversial Thomas More offers an original and critical intervention on the writings of Thomas More and his opposition to King Henry VIII.
Thomas More is known for refusing the oath of succession and remaining silent about his reasons for doing so. His prison literature, however, tells a different story. Under the threat of execution, More waged an astonishingly prolific and often coded writing campaign in rebuke of King Henry VIII’s claim to be supreme head of the Church in England. Travis Curtright’s groundbreaking book shows how William Rastell, More’s nephew and printer, fashioned a historically inaccurate depiction of More, one that persists to this day. He asserted while imprisoned in the Tower of London, More stopped his polemical writing and turned his mind exclusively toward heaven. In contrast, Curtright proves that More’s prison writings are not just devotional literature but also a powerful defense of a united Church under the pope, reestablishing More as a key political and religious thinker, defiant of King Henry VIII.
Most scholars restrict More’s political thought to his Utopia, but The Controversial Thomas More shows how his prison writings best reveal his ideas of political unity and authority, and is a reconsideration of More’s legacy and place in the history of the Henrician Reformation.
“Anyone who wants to know what the ‘man for all seasons’ was really thinking and writing about over the fifteen months of his imprisonment in the Tower of London should read this book.” —Stephen W. Smith, co-editor of The Essential Works of Thomas More
“Curtright shows that More’s prison writings are not, as widely thought, meditations of a saint resigned to death, but the continuation of a complex literary project aiming to restore the unity of Christendom. Must reading for More scholars and a civic challenge to all More’s admirers.” —James R. Stoner, author of Common-Law and Liberal Theory
ISBN: 9780268209155
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
256 pages