Hellfire nation : The politics of sin in American history

書誌事項

Hellfire nation : The politics of sin in American history

James A. Morone

Yale University Press, c2003

  • pbk.

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 11

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Bibliography: p. [499]-560

Includes index

収録内容

  • Us: the city on a hill
  • Them: heretic, heathen, and witch
  • The Puritans become America
  • The wrath of God in Black and White
  • Abolition!
  • South: the pro-slavery argument
  • North: the ragged chorus of the Union
  • Purity and the woman's sphere
  • White slaves and the modern witch-hunt
  • Temperance: crucible of race and class
  • Prohibition and the rise of big government
  • The New Deal call to alms
  • Manifest destiny and the Cold War
  • The sixties
  • Modern morals

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

ISBN 9780300094848

内容説明

The American Constitution firmly separates church and state. Yet religion lies at the heart of American politics. How did America become a nation with the soul of a church? In this study, James Morone recasts American history as a moral epic. From the colonial era to the present day, Americans embraced a Providential mission, tangled with devils, and aspired to save the world. Moral fervour ignited America's fiercest social conflicts - but it also moved dreamers to remake the nation in the name of social justice. Moral crusades inspired abolition, woman suffrage and civil rights, even as they led Americans to hang witches, enslave Africans and ban liquor. Today these moral arguments continue, influencing the debate over everything from abortion to foreign policy. Written with passion and insight, this text tells the story of a brawling, raucous, religious people. Morone shows how fears of sin and dreams of virtue defined the shape of the nation.
巻冊次

pbk. ISBN 9780300105179

内容説明

This insightful new conceptualization of American political history demonstrates that-despite the clear separation of church and state-religion lies at the heart of American politics. From the Puritan founding to the present day, the American story is a moral epic, James Morone says, and while moral fervor has inspired the dream of social justice it has also ignited our fiercest social conflicts. From the colonial era to the present day, Americans embraced a Providential mission, tangled with devils, and aspired to save the world. Moral fervor ignited our fiercest social conflicts-but it also moved dreamers to remake the nation in the name of social justice. Moral crusades inspired abolition, woman suffrage, and civil rights, even as they led Americans to hang witches, enslave Africans, and ban liquor. Today these moral arguments continue, influencing the debate over everything from abortion to foreign policy. Written with passion and deep insight, Hellfire Nation tells the story of a brawling, raucous, religious people. Morone shows how fears of sin and dreams of virtue defined the shape of the nation.

「Nielsen BookData」 より

詳細情報

ページトップへ