Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Problem with Purgatory
1. When Purgatory Was a Place on Earth: The Purgatory Cave on the
Red Lake in Ireland
2. Lough Derg: Moving Purgatory Off the Earth
3. Exile from Ireland: Bishop John England's Republican Apologetics
of Purgatory
4. That Sensible Neighborhood to Hell: Providence and Materiality
within the Periodical (1830-1920)
5. The Ghosts of Vatican II: Purgatory Apostolates and the Lexicon
of the Supernatural
Conclusion
Notes
Index
Diana Walsh Pasulka earned her B.A. degree from the University of
California at Davis, her M.A. from the Graduate Theological Union
in Berkeley and her Ph.D. in Religious Studies from Syracuse
University. She is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Philosophy and Religion at the University of North Carolina,
Wilmington, and has published on the subject of conceptions of the
afterlife and Catholic history. She is the chair of the
American
Academy of Religion group Death and Dying.
"The reader who dives into Heaven Can Wait will be well-rewarded
with a fascinating and insightful overview of the history of
purgatory in Catholic devotional and popular culture."--Catholic
Books Review
"Purgatory is one of those key devotional topics that everyone in
the Catholic world knows about, but almost no one knows how to talk
about. Diana Walsh Pasulka knows how to talk about it:
historically, sympathetically, and critically. What she gives us
here is an eloquent history of purgatory that is sensitive to both
the lived, often eccentric, religious and visionary experiences of
the believers and the wider public debates and institutional
politics that have defined and disciplined the official doctrine
down through the centuries. It turns out that there is not one but
many purgatories, and that these are even more interesting, and
more eerie, than
anyone imagined." --Jeffrey J. Kripal, author of Authors of the
Impossible: The Paranormal and the Sacred
"Purgatory is one of those powerful religious ideas that won't go
away, even when Catholics refuse to believe in it or can't define
it. Diana Pasulka presents a wonderfully clear, well-researched
study that shows how purgatory mediates this world and the next,
and has evolved from a medieval place to a modern process. The
rigor of her historical, material, and ethnographic investigation
is exemplary for the study of religion." --David Morgan,
Professor
& Chair, Department of Religious Studies, Duke University
Heaven Can Wait is a lively exploration of the history of purgatory
in Catholic doctrine and devotion. Pasulka covers a wide range of
purgatory lore, from traditional to modernist, elite to popular,
edifying to merely curious. Her major concern is the fate of
purgatory in American Catholicism, and to that end she uncovers
little-known material about the purgatory apostolates (featuring
devotion to the holy souls) that have played an important part
in
Catholic life. Pasulka proves that purgatory is alive and well,
having survived -- with significant adaptations -- the successive
convulsions of early modern and modern Catholic life. --Carol
Zaleski, Professor
of World Religions, Smith College
"...[A] clear and concise narrative that traces purgatory's
development from a physical place of punishment to a spiritual
state...Pasulka's excellent scholarship makes this a valuable
resource for historians and theologians and for the Catholic
general audience... Highly recommended." --CHOICE
"Pasulka's accounts are interesting, and often touching, showing,
as she says, people 'mourning for a doctrine that was once part of
the lives of all Catholics.'"--The Catholic Historical Review
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