Den nordiska hushållsstaten
Variationer på ett tema av Luther. Auktoritet och ansvar i de tidigmoderna danska och svenska rikena
Language
Swedish; DanishAbstract
Martin Luther's concept of society as a household, ruled by parents, established a model of social organisation that would become important in the Nordic countries in the 17th and 18th centuries. With the dismantling of the Nordic monasteries in the Lutheran Reformation, households became the new framework for Christian life. The Ten Commandments replaced the rules of the monasteries. Similarly, morning and evening prayers in the households replaced the tidal prayers of the monasteries. At various levels, the household was the given and legitimate form of community and organisation. The relationship between parents and children therefore became normative far beyond what we would today call the biological family.
In older Nordic research, the important historical role of the household is usually associated with the Swedish church historian Hilding Pleijel and his thesis about the prevalence of the Household idea. Based on new research, the authors of this anthology confirm Pleijel's basic assumption about the central role of the household. However, this is done in a way that Pleijel himself would hardly have imagined.
After two chapters updating the state of research, a number of studies follow in which the historical and at the same time theological roles of the household are analysed at different levels. In the two Nordic kingdoms, the household is analysed in everyday life, in church teaching and as an overall household state. The anthology makes a special contribution by linking research fronts from Denmark and Sweden and offers comparative perspectives on why the household was given such similar but at the same time so different forms.
Keywords
Household State; Social organisation; Theology; Household Culture; Early modern ScandinaviaDOI
10.22188/kriterium.57ISBN
9789170614972, 9789176554975Publisher
KriteriumPublication date and place
2025Classification
Christian Churches, denominations, groups
Gender studies, gender groups
History
Political science and theory
Social and cultural history
Theology