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The Origins of American Religious Nationalism: Religion in America

Autor Sam Haselby
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 mai 2015
Sam Haselby offers a new and persuasive account of the role of religion in the formation of American nationality. The book shows how, in the early American republic, a contest within Protestantism reshaped American political culture, leading to the creation of an enduring religious nationalism. Following U.S. independence, the new republic faced vital challenges, including a vast and unique continental colonization project undertaken without (in the centuries-old European senses of the terms) either "a church" or "a state." Amid this crisis, two distinct Protestant movements arose: one, a popular and rambunctious frontier revivalism, and the other a nationalist, corporate missionary movement dominated by New England and Northeastern elites. The former heralded the birth of popular American Protestantism, while the latter marked the advent of systematic Protestant missionary activity in the West. The world-historic economic and territorial growth that accelerated in the early American republic, and the complexity of its political life, gave both movements unusual opportunity for innovation and influence. The Origins of American Religious Nationalism explores the competition between them in relation to major contemporary political developments. More specifically, political democratization, large-scale immigration and unruly migration, fears of political disintegration, the rise of American capitalism and American slavery, and the need to nationalize the frontier, all shaped, and were shaped by, this contest. The book follows these developments, focusing mostly on religion and the frontier, from before the American Revolution to the rise of Andrew Jackson. The approach helps explains many important general developments in American history, including why Indian removal took place when and how it did, why the political power of the Southern planter class could be sustained, and, above all, how Andrew Jackson was able to create the first full-blown expression of American religious nationalism.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780199329571
ISBN-10: 0199329575
Pagini: 352
Dimensiuni: 236 x 160 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Religion in America

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

ambitious and thought-provoking book that challenges common understandings of the earliest stages of American nationalism.
Haselby's elaboration of the meaningful conflict between popular frontier evangelicalism and the elite, northeastern missionizing establishment is an important contribution.
In this revelatory narrative, contrasting the competing visions of itinerant frontier preachers and institutionally-based New England evangelicals, Haselby brilliantly illuminates flashpoints of political as well as religious history. While tracking the progress of American Protestantism toward nondenominationalism and missionary enterprise, he tells a suspenseful political story deeply interwoven with the success of nationalism and dynamically rife with sectional and class tensions.
This book provides a fresh, creative, and persuasive account of religion in the early American republic and the relation of religious movements to national politics. It is particularly good on the fierce competition that developed between populist revivalists on the frontier and nationally-minded Christian leaders on the eastern seaboard-and on how that competition led eventually to the national acceptance of slavery. This study is particularly important for charting the impact of religion on politics and vice versa.
This important book explains how the early United States became a battleground for competing visions of Protestant Christianity. Through incisive analysis of the separation of church and state, competition for souls on the frontier, and the rise of evangelical missions, Sam Haselby shows that the question is not if America was originally a Christian nation, but if it was a nation at all, and whose Christianity would rule.
Although Haselbys story is most relevant to nineteenth-century U.S. history, the legacy of his story again with Trump in mind is far from finished ... Haselby may hold the key to explaining what so far has escaped most scholars and pundits who are still scratching their heads about the 2016 presidential contest namely, Trumps appeal to evangelical voters for whom his flagrant flaunting of Christian morality should be repugnant.

Notă biografică

Sam Haselby was a Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows from 2007-10, a faculty member at the American University of Beirut and the American University in Cairo, and the Senior Executive Producer for Al Jazeera America Digital. He is now a Visiting Assistant Professor of History at Columbia University.