Reimagining denominationalism : interpretive essays

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Reimagining denominationalism : interpretive essays

edited by Robert Bruce Mullin, Russell E. Richey

(Religion in America series)

Oxford University Press, 1994

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Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Denominationalism-that "free market" mode of organizing religious life which, some say, manages to combine traditional religious claims with a free society in a peculiarly American way-is the subject of the previously unpublished papers in this collection. No institution, the editors argue, is as crucial for the understanding of American religious life, yet so much in need of reassessment as the denomination. In a wide-ranging collection of articles, a distinguished set of commentators on American religion examine the denomination's past and present roles, its definable nature, and its evolution over time. The study of denominations, the authors suggest sheds light on broader understandings of American religious and cultural life. The contributors-scholars of the Roman Catholic, Protestant, Jewish, Mormon, and African-American traditions-explore the state and history of denominational studies in America, suggesting new models and approaches drawn from anthropology, sociology, theology, history, and history of religions. They offer provocative case studies that reimagine denominational studies.

Table of Contents

Contributors Introduction Russell E. Richey and Robert Bruce Mullin I. Overviews The Death and Rebirth of Denominational History Henry Warner Bowden Denominational Studies in the Reshaping of American Religious History William R. Hutchinson The People as Well as the Prelates: A Social History of a Denomination Jay P. Dolan Denominationalism and the Black Church Laurie F. Maffly-Kipp Denominations and Denominationalism: An American Morphology Russell E. Richey The Question of Denominational Histories in the United States: Dead End or Creative Beginning? Charles H. Long II. Models Denominations: Who and What Are We Studying? Nancy T. Ammerman ''Have You Ever Prayed to Saint Jude?'': Reflections on Fieldwork in Catholic Chicago Robert A. Orsi Denominations as Bilingual Communities Robert Bruce Mullin Remembering, Recovering, and Inventing What Being the People of God Means: Reflections on Method in the Scholarly Writing of Denominational History Jan Shipps III. Case Studies Denominational History When Gender Is the Focus: Women in American Methodism Jean Mill Schmidt Reform, Conservative, and Orthodox Judaism in America: Is There an Alternative to Denominationalism? Marc Lee Raphael African Methodisms and the Rise of Black Denominationalism Will B. Gravely Presbyterians and the Mystique of Organizational Efficiency, 1870-1936 James H. Moorhead ''Denominational'' Colleges in Antebellum America? A Case Study of Presbyterians and Methodists in the South Bradley J. Longfield Denominational History as Public History: The Lutheran Case Christa R. Klein Index

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