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Andrew Pettegree is Professor of Modern History at the University of St Andrews, where he was the founding director of the St. Andrews Reformation Studies Institute. He is the author of a number of books on the Reformation and the history of communication, including Reformation and the Culture of Persuasion, The Book in the Renaissance, which was a New York Times Notable Book of 2010, and The Invention of News. In 2015 The Invention of News won the Goldsmith Prize of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He lives in Fife, Scotland.
Andrew Pettegree is Professor of Modern History at the University of St Andrews, where he was the founding director of the St. Andrews Reformation Studies Institute. He is the author of a number of books on the Reformation and the history of communication, including Reformation and the Culture of Persuasion, The Book in the Renaissance, which was a New York Times Notable Book of 2010, and The Invention of News. In 2015 The Invention of News won the Goldsmith Prize of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He lives in Fife, Scotland.
Publishing in advance of the Reformation's 500th anniversary, Brand Luther fuses the history of religion, of printing, and of capitalism-the literal marketplace of ideas-into one enthralling story, revolutionizing our understanding of one of the pivotal figures and eras in human history.
Andrew Pettegree is Professor of Modern History at the University of St Andrews, where he was the founding director of the St. Andrews Reformation Studies Institute. He is the author of a number of books on the Reformation and the history of communication, including Reformation and the Culture of Persuasion, The Book in the Renaissance, which was a New York Times Notable Book of 2010, and The Invention of News. In 2015 The Invention of News won the Goldsmith Prize of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He lives in Fife, Scotland.
“A perceptive study of Luther’s ideas and the rise of a new print
culture in Europe…. some regard [Luther] as the man who opened the
floodgates of modernity, as a very modern man…. Mr. Pettegree does
not attempt an explicit comparison, but the name that comes to mind
is Steve Jobs, a person who transformed an industry and created his
own brand in doing so.” —The Wall Street Journal
“Insightful and fresh….an important story told with careful
scholarship and elegant writing.”— National Catholic Reporter
“There is very little serious academic work that explicitly
explores the role of printing in the rise of
Protestantism. Brand Luther fills that gap. It is an
insightful and highly scholarly book but it’s very readable at the
same time. It is a well-researched book that provides deep analysis
of the rise of Protestantism. It should be on university
curriculums for history. It is a must-read for everyone interested
in the history of Europe and religion. Pettegree’s scholarship is
unmatched in its insight, scholarly value, and authority.”—The
Washington Book Review
“A remarkable story, thoroughly researched and clearly told, and
one sure to change the way we think about the early
Reformation.”—Washington Post
“Pettegree expertly guides us through Luther's years and
achievements…. Most of all, though, Pettegree deserves credit for
his fresh slant on the Reformation and his dynamic
storytelling….And as this absorbing and illuminating book capably
shows, after Luther, print and public communication—and indeed,
religion—would never be the same again.”—Weekly Standard
“Pettegree…shines light on an overlooked talent of [the
Reformation’s] main progenitor…Brand Luther shows how Wittenberg’s
most famous son took keen interest not only in the content of his
books, but also in how they were manufactured, designed, and
marketed.”—Christianity Today
“Pettegree admirably presents Luther, warts and all. But in the
final analysis, he asks whether printing created Luther and the
Protestant Reformation or Luther created mass media through his
shrewd manipulation and adaptation of the printing industry to his
specific needs. This book argues both—it’s hard to separate one
from the other since the rising success of printing as well as
Protestantism seemed to go hand in hand. Well researched and well
written, this essential book is for anyone remotely interested in
Luther or early modern technology.” –Library Journal
"Well researched and well written, this essential book is for
anyone remotely interested in Luther or early modern
technology."—Sandra Collins, Byzantine Catholic Seminary Lib.,
Pittsburgh
“A cogent and authoritative overview of Martin Luther (1483-1546)
and of the burgeoning printing industry that disseminated his
ideas….An informative history of a man of ‘adamantine strengths
and…very human weaknesses’ who incited a theological revolution.”-
Kirkus
“Authoritative and beautifully written, Pettegree’s book provides a
radical take on a revolutionary figure.”- Bruce Gordon, Yale
Divinity School, author of Calvin
“Andrew Pettegree draws on a lifetime’s scholarly engagement with
the history of the book to offer us a fresh way of looking at
Luther and his times. Of all the many new books which will
commemorate the momentous events of 1517, this will be one of the
most original: not just a biography of Martin Luther, but a study
which uses the printing industry as a lens through which to view
his extraordinary achievement as writer and inspiration of the
movement which reshaped European religion.”-Diarmaid MacCulloch,
author of The Reformation: A
History and Christianity: The First Three Thousand
Years
“This perceptive and engaging analysis of the German Reformation
highlights the fruitful interweaving of Martin Luther’s skills as a
preacher, writer, and publicist and the burgeoning printing
industry. Pettegree’s lucid and persuasive account offers
unparalleled insight into this outstanding early modern example of
effective use of communication techniques that allowed Luther’s
message to take hold.”-Karin Maag, Professor of History and
Director, H. Henry Meeter Center for Calvin Studies, Calvin College
and English editor and translator of The Reformation and the
Book
“Andrew Pettegree brings his expert knowledge of the
sixteenth-century book business to bear on the old crux of
‘printing and the Reformation.’ Many images of Luther will appear
in the next few years, and this one is particularly intriguing.
Pettegree’s Luther understood the importance of the new medium and
the new format in which his message was expressed. He was not an
artless voice declaiming against the whirlwind, as he sometimes
portrayed himself. Rather he was an astute publicist for a message
that he firmly believed was much greater than himself.”-Euan
Cameron, Union Theological Seminary; author of The European
Reformation
“Brand Luther is an important recasting of the history of
Martin Luther and the rise of the German Reformation. Without
reducing the role of religious ideas or the power of personal
faith, Andrew Pettegree demonstrates how Luther was able to harness
and exploit the emerging power of print in order to broadcast his
message of religious reform and ultimately bring about a
transformation of European Christianity. Pettegree tells both sides
of the story with equal vigour and understanding, moving between
Luther the reformer, the relentless weaver of words, and the
emerging forms of early modern media. The result is a book that
does not just commemorate the Reformation but helps us to view its
history in a completely different way.”-C. Scott Dixon, author
of Protestants: A History from Wittenberg to
Pennsylvania
“Brand Luther tells two tales. The first is an engaging biography
of the German reformer Martin Luther. The second is a stimulating
account of the first time the printing press helped shape a mass
movement. Andrew Pettegree deftly combines these two stories to
show how an abstract academic dispute grew into the Reformation
that divided western Christendom. This is history-writing at its
best!”-Dr. Amy Nelson Burnett, Paula and D.B. Varner Professor of
History, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
“Andrew Pettegree’s Brand Luther brings new excitement and insight
to the persistent question of why Martin Luther’s calls for reform
revolutionized western Christianity when earlier critiques had
not. Drawing on his deep knowledge of the Protestant
Reformation and the early modern printing industry, Pettegree has
crafted a compelling narrative that conveys the excitement, chaos,
and uncertainty of the first decades of the Protestant
Reformation. In Pettegree’s incisive telling, the Reformation
is just as crucially a “commercial revolution” as a theological
one. He presents Luther as an innovative, forward-thinking
mover of the print industry whose mastery of the new medium of
print transformed both Christianity and the business of
printing. Pettegree places the interactions among Luther, the
emerging print industry, and the economic development of the city
of Wittenberg at the center of the Reformation drama, returning a
sense of suspense to a well-known story and emphasizing the fact
that Luther’s success and long-lasting influence was never a
foregone conclusion.”-Karen E. Spierling, editor, Calvin and the
Book: The Evolution of the Printed Word in Reformed Protestantism
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