Protestants and American Conservatism: A Short History
Autor Gillis J. Harpen Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 oct 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780199977413
ISBN-10: 0199977410
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 236 x 160 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0199977410
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 236 x 160 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Harp's work is an intellectual history in the "history of ideas" tradition, focused on high-level politics and economics. The centuries-long survey is a pleasure to read throughout. The writing and research are compelling, the coverage balanced and thorough, the arguments interesting and productive.
Gillis Harp's Protestants and American Conservatism is an admirable attempt to illuminate one of the most confounding alliances in American history
American conservatives still confounded by the election and enduring popularity of Donald Trump among groups describing themselves as conservative will acquire a better historical understanding of the rise of Trumpism by reading Gillis J. Harp's Protestants and American Conservatism.... The book is carefully researched and chock-full of detail.
An effective historical introduction that should stand as a useful way point on the road to a more capacious understanding of the roots of the contemporary religious Right.
Harps knowledge of American Protestant conservatism is encyclopedic, his prose is clear, his judgments are measured, and his message is sobering.
A fine history indeed, with a great deal of insightful information in, just as promised, a short, brisk volume of 237 pages before the notes and back matter...These well-written chapters will be of interest to students, non-expert readers, and to scholars as well
This is an important book, no matter which side of the religious/secular or progressive/conservative battle lines you occupy...From the founding to the Civil War to now, Dr. Harp makes a compelling narrative of Christian Protestant conservatism.
Gillis Harp's wide-ranging narrative offers a remarkably innovative perspective on the centuries-long symbiotic relationship between evangelical Protestantism and American conservatism. Its bold (but carefully documented) thesis will change the way we think about politics and religion in America. As Harp demonstrates, the roots of the contemporary Religious Right may lie not only in the 20th century, but in the 17th.
In this ambitious but highly accessible book, Gillis Harp skillfully charts the long, tangled, and consequential relationship between Protestantism and political conservatism in American life, all with a sharp eye for pivot points and secular drifts that have made today's religious right an unorthodox thing. Harp's is an invaluable guide to four hundred years of Christian political thought and action and a timely exegesis of how American believers arrived at their current political moment.
Gillis Harp has taken the long view in showing why an issue at the forefront of contemporary political interest deserves full historical treatment. His carefully researched and clearly argued account of the long-standing inner connections between conservative Protestants and conservative politics illuminates both the nation's past and the contentious present. It is both a word in season and a rewarding reflection on a very long history.
A sweeping yet tightly argued narrative, built on exhaustive research... This is a wonderful book and essential reading for anyone starting their own project on American conservatism or the relationship between religion and politics in any period of American history. It will also be of interest to anyone who just wants a good read in intellectual history.
Gillis Harp's Protestants and American Conservatism is an admirable attempt to illuminate one of the most confounding alliances in American history
American conservatives still confounded by the election and enduring popularity of Donald Trump among groups describing themselves as conservative will acquire a better historical understanding of the rise of Trumpism by reading Gillis J. Harp's Protestants and American Conservatism.... The book is carefully researched and chock-full of detail.
An effective historical introduction that should stand as a useful way point on the road to a more capacious understanding of the roots of the contemporary religious Right.
Harps knowledge of American Protestant conservatism is encyclopedic, his prose is clear, his judgments are measured, and his message is sobering.
A fine history indeed, with a great deal of insightful information in, just as promised, a short, brisk volume of 237 pages before the notes and back matter...These well-written chapters will be of interest to students, non-expert readers, and to scholars as well
This is an important book, no matter which side of the religious/secular or progressive/conservative battle lines you occupy...From the founding to the Civil War to now, Dr. Harp makes a compelling narrative of Christian Protestant conservatism.
Gillis Harp's wide-ranging narrative offers a remarkably innovative perspective on the centuries-long symbiotic relationship between evangelical Protestantism and American conservatism. Its bold (but carefully documented) thesis will change the way we think about politics and religion in America. As Harp demonstrates, the roots of the contemporary Religious Right may lie not only in the 20th century, but in the 17th.
In this ambitious but highly accessible book, Gillis Harp skillfully charts the long, tangled, and consequential relationship between Protestantism and political conservatism in American life, all with a sharp eye for pivot points and secular drifts that have made today's religious right an unorthodox thing. Harp's is an invaluable guide to four hundred years of Christian political thought and action and a timely exegesis of how American believers arrived at their current political moment.
Gillis Harp has taken the long view in showing why an issue at the forefront of contemporary political interest deserves full historical treatment. His carefully researched and clearly argued account of the long-standing inner connections between conservative Protestants and conservative politics illuminates both the nation's past and the contentious present. It is both a word in season and a rewarding reflection on a very long history.
A sweeping yet tightly argued narrative, built on exhaustive research... This is a wonderful book and essential reading for anyone starting their own project on American conservatism or the relationship between religion and politics in any period of American history. It will also be of interest to anyone who just wants a good read in intellectual history.
Notă biografică
Gillis J. Harp received his masters and doctorate in American history from the University of Virginia. His is Professor of History at Grove City College. He is the author of Brahmin Prophet: Phillips Brooks and the Path of Liberal Protestantism and Positivist Republic: Auguste Comte and the Reconstruction of American Liberalism, 1865-1920.