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Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker Movement: Home

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Catholic Worker logo

Source: http://dorothydayguild.org/about-her-life/the-catholic-worker-movement/ (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 US)

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Photo of Dorothy Day

Dorothy Day in 1916. Public domain. Wikimedia Commons

Selected Books

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In 1932, Dorothy Day, a journalist, bohemian socialist, and recent convert to Catholicism, met the French-born Peter Maurin. Maurin became Day's spiritual  mentor. They collaborated in seeking ways to live the biblical injunctions to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and to seek justice and peace through the founding of the Catholic Worker Movement. 

After Maurin's death in 1949 Dorothy Day continued to lead the movement and to edit its newspaper, the Catholic Worker, until her death in 1980. She lead the movement from the front, taking part in picketing and protests. She was arrested multiple times for her principled resistance to injustice. She is one of the best known and influential Catholic laypersons of the 20th century, and has been named a "Servant of God" by the Vatican, the first step on the road to sainthood.

This guide will link Duquesne University researchers to many sorts of resources on Day, Maurin, the Catholic Worker Movement, Catholic Social Teaching, and other related themes.


E-Reference Works

To see these articles off campus, you will need to enter you Multipass username and password when you click on a link.

Below are articles from the New Catholic Encyclopedia, 2nd edition

Dorothy Day

Peter Maurin

Catholic Worker Movement

 

Below are articles from the Encyclopedia of Activism and Social Justice

Dorothy Day

Catholic Worker Movement

Print Reference Works

Print Reference Works

Maurin

Photo of Peter Maurin

Peter Maurin. Source: http://cjd.org/2010/07/01/why-not-canonize-peter-maurin-co-founder-with-dorothy-day-of-the-catholic-worker-movement/

Selected Books

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Click the button above to visit the CRRA website, home of the Catholic Portal, a catalog of rare, unique, and uncommon Catholic scholarly materials in the library collections of the over 40 member institutions of the CRRA. An ever-growing number of the items listed may contain links to the full-text!