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Conservative Catholicism and the Carmelites: Identity, Ethnicity, and Tradition in the Modern Church,Used
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This book explores the historical transformation after Vatican II of one Carmelite community into a neotraditionalist order defending Catholic teaching and spearheading a movement among women to define Catholicism. This historical analysis suggests that the fundamental disagreement between "conservative" and "liberal" Catholics lies in a dispute about looking to AngloProtestant culture for a theological and ecclesiological model for the church.Conservative Catholicism and the Carmelites analyzes the appeal of the order to Latino/a communities in the United States, where the author finds that neotraditionalist Catholicism helps maintain and articulate ethnocultural identities. Darryl V. Caterine suggests the existence of at least three "churches" encompassed by postVatican II, U.S. Catholicism: a liberal contingent embracing AngloProtestantism; a neotraditionalist contingent in critical tension with AngloProtestantism; and a contingent of transnational Catholic communities from Spanish, New World cultures in critical tension with AngloProtestant culture.
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