Houses Divided: Evangelical Schisms and the Crisis of the Union in Missouri: Religion in America
Autor Lucas P. Volkmanen Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 apr 2018
Din seria Religion in America
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190248321
ISBN-10: 0190248327
Pagini: 328
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Religion in America
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190248327
Pagini: 328
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Religion in America
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Volkman's study reveals that race-, class-, and gender-shaped contestations as urban and rural social interests collided in Missouri during the Civil War. Houses Divided dives deep into the archives of Missouri journalism in the nineteenth century to reveal how news publications wrought conflict upon the people of Missouri.
This deeply cited work deserves attention from students and scholars interested in the Civil War, religion in the nineteenth century, religion and law, and religion and race. Those studying church history in the United States will be amply rewarded in reading Houses Divided.
While we often look at denominations from ten thousand feet, many times the "divided houses" are on the ground. Volkman demonstrates that small slices influenced the entire pie.Houses Divided helps us better understand the religious dimensions of the Civil War.
Volkman's case study sheds considerable fresh light on these significant events, and is a welcome addition to the growing body of literature on Civil War religion and the contested nature of American evangelical identities.
a definitive study ... Volkman demonstrates how the major evangelical schisms of the mid-nineteenth century profoundly shaped politics, constitutional law, and the everyday lives of ordinary Americans.
there is much in Volkman's Houses Divided that is both unique and uniquely enlightening in all of its complicated relationships and diverse antecedents, the history of evangelical strife in nineteenth-century Missouri demands a capable scholar of real substance. In refreshingly accessible prose and with supporting detail aplenty, Lucas Volkman has proved himself, with Houses Divided: Evangelical Schisms and the Crisis of the Union in Missouri, to be just that.
Lucas Volkman's admirable concentration on place, in this deeply-researched study of the troubled borderland state of Missouri, pays rich dividends by showing how religious, political, and cultural antagonism profoundly shaped the lives of ordinary people during the era of Civil War and Reconstruction. This is a major contribution to our understanding of the interpenetration of church and state at this crux of American history.
Lucas Volkman's thorough research into local Missouri sources makes Houses Divided a refreshingly informative contribution to understanding an entire era. By attending to church disputes before, during, and after the Civil War, Volkman demonstrates the importance of Missouri for American cultural conflicts and the salience of religion alongside race and gender to those conflicts. It is an important book.
Houses Divided is a vital and groundbreaking book that expands historical understanding of both evangelicalism and the entire Civil War Era. Through the microcosm of church schisms in Missouri, it illuminates the role of religious division in the ideological, economic, legal, social, and political changes that transformed America between 1830 and 1875. Rich in insights, its discussion of the schisms' role in Reconstruction is particularly original and brilliant.
[T]his work represents a crucial local piece to the national puzzle of how religious conflict featured in the sectional conflict. It contains a trove of state-level church-state conundrums that Volkman deftly unpacks. And it closes with an intriguing claim that white evangelical Missourians rejected prohibition in the late-19th century due to the lingering abolitionist taint on moral politics. Altogether, Volkman shows that, for some Americans, lasting sectional allegiances took shape within houses of worship-and they ventured out of them with a righteous vengeance.
This deeply cited work deserves attention from students and scholars interested in the Civil War, religion in the nineteenth century, religion and law, and religion and race. Those studying church history in the United States will be amply rewarded in reading Houses Divided.
While we often look at denominations from ten thousand feet, many times the "divided houses" are on the ground. Volkman demonstrates that small slices influenced the entire pie.Houses Divided helps us better understand the religious dimensions of the Civil War.
Volkman's case study sheds considerable fresh light on these significant events, and is a welcome addition to the growing body of literature on Civil War religion and the contested nature of American evangelical identities.
a definitive study ... Volkman demonstrates how the major evangelical schisms of the mid-nineteenth century profoundly shaped politics, constitutional law, and the everyday lives of ordinary Americans.
there is much in Volkman's Houses Divided that is both unique and uniquely enlightening in all of its complicated relationships and diverse antecedents, the history of evangelical strife in nineteenth-century Missouri demands a capable scholar of real substance. In refreshingly accessible prose and with supporting detail aplenty, Lucas Volkman has proved himself, with Houses Divided: Evangelical Schisms and the Crisis of the Union in Missouri, to be just that.
Lucas Volkman's admirable concentration on place, in this deeply-researched study of the troubled borderland state of Missouri, pays rich dividends by showing how religious, political, and cultural antagonism profoundly shaped the lives of ordinary people during the era of Civil War and Reconstruction. This is a major contribution to our understanding of the interpenetration of church and state at this crux of American history.
Lucas Volkman's thorough research into local Missouri sources makes Houses Divided a refreshingly informative contribution to understanding an entire era. By attending to church disputes before, during, and after the Civil War, Volkman demonstrates the importance of Missouri for American cultural conflicts and the salience of religion alongside race and gender to those conflicts. It is an important book.
Houses Divided is a vital and groundbreaking book that expands historical understanding of both evangelicalism and the entire Civil War Era. Through the microcosm of church schisms in Missouri, it illuminates the role of religious division in the ideological, economic, legal, social, and political changes that transformed America between 1830 and 1875. Rich in insights, its discussion of the schisms' role in Reconstruction is particularly original and brilliant.
[T]his work represents a crucial local piece to the national puzzle of how religious conflict featured in the sectional conflict. It contains a trove of state-level church-state conundrums that Volkman deftly unpacks. And it closes with an intriguing claim that white evangelical Missourians rejected prohibition in the late-19th century due to the lingering abolitionist taint on moral politics. Altogether, Volkman shows that, for some Americans, lasting sectional allegiances took shape within houses of worship-and they ventured out of them with a righteous vengeance.
Notă biografică
Lucas P. Volkman completed his PhD at the University of Missouri in 2012. He is currently an Associate Professor of History at Moberly Area Community College.