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Living I Was Your Plague

Martin Luther's World and Legacy

Lyndal Roper author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Princeton University Press

Published:21st Feb '23

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Living I Was Your Plague cover

Exploring the life and legacy of Martin Luther, Living I Was Your Plague offers fresh insights into his crafted image and lasting impact.

In Living I Was Your Plague, renowned biographer Lyndal Roper delves into the multifaceted image of Martin Luther, a pivotal figure in the history of Christianity. Roper explores how Luther meticulously crafted his own persona and how this image has evolved over time, influencing both his contemporaries and modern interpretations. She presents a compelling narrative that illustrates the strong emotions Luther evoked in both supporters and detractors, revealing the lasting impact of his actions and words on the world today.

The book highlights the significant role of art in shaping Luther's legacy, particularly through the works of painter Lucas Cranach. Roper discusses how Cranach's images contributed to making Luther a recognizable figure within Lutheran culture, intertwining biography with visual representation. This exploration extends to Luther's personal life, examining his dreams and relationships, as well as the complexities of his masculinity as reflected in his often humorous yet crude polemics.

Roper does not shy away from addressing the darker aspects of Luther's legacy, including his staunch anti-papal sentiments and troubling anti-Semitic views. Living I Was Your Plague is richly illustrated and offers a nuanced understanding of Luther's enduring legacy, revealing how his image has been commercialized and memorialized in contemporary society. This work stands as a significant contribution to the cultural history surrounding one of the most influential figures in Western thought.

"Roper’s book proves that a rigorously scholarly work can also be a pleasure to read."---Dan Hitchens, The Times
"Roper questions Luther’s character and legacy with the same anti-authoritarianismthat animated her subject, combining acuity with wit and levity, just as Luther did— though with fewer obscenities."---Suzannah Lipscomb, A Financial Times Best Book Of The Week
"Provocative and thought-provoking, Living I Was Your Plague is an important contribution to our understanding of the life and afterlife of one of history’s most complex figures, and a lively testament to the striking originality of Roper’s scholarship."---Alexandra Walsham, Times Literary Supplement
"Through its thematic approach this collection says much that could not be said in the inevitably heroic format of the biography. It provides insights that will shape the reader’s experience of every future encounter with Luther. It integrates visual and material culture brilliantly throughout, arguing that from Cranach’s early portraits to Playmobil’s bestselling Luther figurine, images must be central to our interpretation of the Reformation. And it offers a critical reflection – wonderfully personal in places – on the experience of writing biography and living as a historian through a period of intense public interest. At a moment at which tensions over race and heritage have coalesced around public representations of historical men this collection provides a moral compass for those seeking to write the histories of heroes with dark sides."---Bridget Heal, History Today
"After an outpouring of books about Luther at the time of the quicentenary, one could have been forgiven for thinking. . . that there wasn't much of interest left to be said. In her ambition to tackle together the life and the legend, and her avowed determination to appraise Luther in a thorougly Lutheran spirit of anti-authoritarianism, Lyndal Roper has triumphantly demonstrated the contrary."---Peter Marshall, The Tablet
"[Living I Was Your Plague] may unsettle in ways that open diligent readers to new vision. The book accomplishes something that few of the books about Luther occasioned by the 2017 anniversary accomplished: it sees Luther with fresh eyes and shows us why we need to wrestle with his legacy."---Vincent Evener, Christian Century
"Roper questions Luther’s character and legacy with the same anti-authoritarianism that animated her subject, combining acuity with wit and levity, just as Luther did — though with fewer obscenities. But it is those obscenities that Roper, Regius Professor of History at the University of Oxford, has in mind, as she grapples with how to understand an intellectual in the context of their whole self, conscious and unconscious, warts and all."---Suzannah Lipscomb, Financial Times
"Intelligent and absorbing"---Sean Sheehan, The Prisma

ISBN: 9780691205328

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

296 pages