God's Marshall Plan: American Protestants and the Struggle for the Soul of Europe
Autor James D. Strasburgen Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 aug 2021
Preț: 558.74 lei
Preț vechi: 638.85 lei
-13% Nou
Puncte Express: 838
Preț estimativ în valută:
107.01€ • 110.25$ • 89.64£
107.01€ • 110.25$ • 89.64£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 22-28 ianuarie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197516447
ISBN-10: 0197516440
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 26 black and white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 236 x 160 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197516440
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 26 black and white illustrations
Dimensiuni: 236 x 160 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
God's Marshall Plan arrives timely, joining the recent trend toward transnationalizing US religious history and more specifically the bourgeoning field of studies on US-European religious encounters after the Second World War.
God's Marshall Plan is a well-researched and ambitious work. Strasburg's efforts at complicating simplistic dichotomies and demonstrating the influence of foreign policy on American Protestantism are commendable. He writes a compelling narrative, and offers many anecdotes that challenge facile (and anachronistic) characterizations of American Christian nationalism. His work is a helpful corrective to one-dimensional portrayals of twentieth-century American theological controversies.
God's Marshall Plan is an excellent addition to the growing number of titles in the field of religion and American foreign policy.... God's Marshall Plan functions as a synthetic narrative of ecumenical and evangelical American Protestantism between World War I and the Trump presidency. The book has great potential as a survey text in undergraduate and graduate classes—and even more so as it casts American religious history in a transnational context.
After World War II, American Protestants sought to revive European civilization by re-Christianizing Germany. This brilliant, elegantly written book explores this project in rich detail, along the way revealing how American Protestants exported their own culture wars to a continent in ruin. Ultimately, those who underwent the most profound changes were American Protestants themselves.
Lost in the recent flourish of historical scholarship on American Protestantism in the 20th century global arena is a relationship that had much to do with inspiring and informing such international engagement in the first place: that which connected the U.S. and Germany in theological exchange. God's Marshall Plan not only fills that gap, but also charts with nuance and moving detail the decades-long transatlantic endeavors that drew the Protestant cultures of these two places together, with profound impact on religion and politics on a world stage. This beautifully crafted and timely book reveals not just how German-American relations during wartime shaped modern global Christianity but also how it raised unanswered, and still relevant, questions about the nature and ramifications of the debate between Christian nationalism and Christian globalism in our modern age.
God's Marshall Plan is a smart, ambitious, and original book that puts religion at the center of American policy in Cold War Europe. This compelling history forces us to wrestle with what we think we know about how American religion, politics, and foreign policy intersected at home and abroad as the US emerged from World War II to become a global superpower.
Strasbourg...and the ecumenicists had come a long way, and their stories form the true heart of this exceptionally interesting and well-structured book.
This is an engaging account of transnational American Protestant activism in Europe, and especially in Germany, during the three major wars of the twentieth century.
Very well-researched book.
Sophisticated, well-documented and wide-ranging book.
In God's Marshall Plan, James D. Strasburg offers a historically informed plea for a tolerant, progressive, and globally engaged American Protestantism... Solidly researched and written, Strasburg's transatlantic approach contributes significantly to our understanding of twentieth-century religious and Cold War history.
God's Marshall Plan is a well-researched and ambitious work. Strasburg's efforts at complicating simplistic dichotomies and demonstrating the influence of foreign policy on American Protestantism are commendable. He writes a compelling narrative, and offers many anecdotes that challenge facile (and anachronistic) characterizations of American Christian nationalism. His work is a helpful corrective to one-dimensional portrayals of twentieth-century American theological controversies.
God's Marshall Plan is an excellent addition to the growing number of titles in the field of religion and American foreign policy.... God's Marshall Plan functions as a synthetic narrative of ecumenical and evangelical American Protestantism between World War I and the Trump presidency. The book has great potential as a survey text in undergraduate and graduate classes—and even more so as it casts American religious history in a transnational context.
After World War II, American Protestants sought to revive European civilization by re-Christianizing Germany. This brilliant, elegantly written book explores this project in rich detail, along the way revealing how American Protestants exported their own culture wars to a continent in ruin. Ultimately, those who underwent the most profound changes were American Protestants themselves.
Lost in the recent flourish of historical scholarship on American Protestantism in the 20th century global arena is a relationship that had much to do with inspiring and informing such international engagement in the first place: that which connected the U.S. and Germany in theological exchange. God's Marshall Plan not only fills that gap, but also charts with nuance and moving detail the decades-long transatlantic endeavors that drew the Protestant cultures of these two places together, with profound impact on religion and politics on a world stage. This beautifully crafted and timely book reveals not just how German-American relations during wartime shaped modern global Christianity but also how it raised unanswered, and still relevant, questions about the nature and ramifications of the debate between Christian nationalism and Christian globalism in our modern age.
God's Marshall Plan is a smart, ambitious, and original book that puts religion at the center of American policy in Cold War Europe. This compelling history forces us to wrestle with what we think we know about how American religion, politics, and foreign policy intersected at home and abroad as the US emerged from World War II to become a global superpower.
Strasbourg...and the ecumenicists had come a long way, and their stories form the true heart of this exceptionally interesting and well-structured book.
This is an engaging account of transnational American Protestant activism in Europe, and especially in Germany, during the three major wars of the twentieth century.
Very well-researched book.
Sophisticated, well-documented and wide-ranging book.
In God's Marshall Plan, James D. Strasburg offers a historically informed plea for a tolerant, progressive, and globally engaged American Protestantism... Solidly researched and written, Strasburg's transatlantic approach contributes significantly to our understanding of twentieth-century religious and Cold War history.
Notă biografică
James D. Strasburg is Assistant Professor of History at Hillsdale College.