Visionary Republic

Visionary Republic
Author: Ruth H. Bloch
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 312
Release: 1988-02-26
Genre: History
ISBN: 0521357640

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This book sheds light on the role of religion in the American Revolution and surveys an important facet of the intellectual history of the early Republic.

Visionary Republic

Visionary Republic
Author: Ruth Hedi Bloch
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 600
Release: 1980
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: UCAL:C2939451

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Visionary Republic

Visionary Republic
Author: R. Howard Bloch
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1988
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: OCLC:1405451616

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Visionary Republic

Visionary Republic
Author: Ruth H. Bloch
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 291
Release: 1988
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: OCLC:1024530980

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Legitimacy and Power Politics

Legitimacy and Power Politics
Author: Mlada Bukovansky
Publsiher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 266
Release: 2010-01-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780691146706

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This book examines the causes and consequences of a major transformation in both domestic and international politics: the shift from dynastically legitimated monarchical sovereignty to popularly legitimated national sovereignty. It analyzes the impact of Enlightenment discourse on politics in eighteenth-century Europe and the United States, showing how that discourse facilitated new authority struggles in Old Regime Europe, shaped the American and French Revolutions, and influenced the relationships between the revolutionary regimes and the international system. The interaction between traditional and democratic ideas of legitimacy transformed the international system by the early nineteenth century, when people began to take for granted the desirability of equality, individual rights, and restraint of power. Using an interpretive, historically sensitive approach to international relations, the author considers the complex interplay between elite discourses about political legitimacy and strategic power struggles within and among states. She shows how culture, power, and interests interacted to produce a crucial yet poorly understood case of international change. The book not only shows the limits of liberal and realist theories of international relations, but also demonstrates how aspects of these theories can be integrated with insights derived from a constructivist perspective that takes culture and legitimacy seriously. The author finds that cultural contests over the terms of political legitimacy constitute one of the central mechanisms by which the character of sovereignty is transformed in the international system--a conclusion as true today as it was in the eighteenth century.

Faith in Reading

Faith in Reading
Author: David Paul Nord
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 222
Release: 2004-08-19
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780199883899

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In the twenty-first century, mass media corporations are often seen as profit-hungry money machines. It was a different world in the early days of mass communication in America. Faith in Reading tells the remarkable story of the noncommercial religious origins of our modern media culture. In the early nineteenth century, a few visionary entrepreneurs decided the time was right to reach everyone in America through the medium of print. Though they were modern businessmen, their publishing enterprises were not commercial businesses but nonprofit societies committed to the publication of traditional religious texts. Drawing on organizational reports and archival sources, David Paul Nord shows how the managers of Bible and religious tract societies made themselves into large-scale manufacturers and distributors of print. These organizations believed it was possible to place the same printed message into the hands of every man, woman, and child in America. Employing modern printing technologies and business methods, they were remarkably successful, churning out millions of Bibles, tracts, religious books, and periodicals. They mounted massive campaigns to make books cheap and plentiful by turning them into modern, mass-produced consumer goods. Nord demonstrates how religious publishers learned to work against the flow of ordinary commerce. They believed that reading was too important to be left to the "market revolution," so they turned the market on its head, seeking to deliver their product to everyone, regardless of ability or even desire to buy. Wedding modern technology and national organization to a traditional faith in reading, these publishing societies imagined and then invented mass media in America.

A Republic of Righteousness

A Republic of Righteousness
Author: Jonathan D Sassi
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2001-10-11
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780198029755

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This book examines the debate over the connection between religion and public life in society during the fifty years following the American Revolution. Sassi challenges the conventional wisdom, finding an essential continuity to the period's public Christianity, whereas most previous studies have seen this period as one in which the nation's cultural paradigm shifted from republicanism to liberal individualism. Focusing on the Congregational clergy of New England, he demonstrates that throughout this period there were Americans concerned with their corporate destiny, retaining a commitment to constructing a righteous community and assessing the cosmic meaning of the American experiment.

The Second Disestablishment

The Second Disestablishment
Author: Steven Green
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 472
Release: 2010-04-12
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780199889716

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Debates over the proper relationship between church and state in America tend to focus either on the founding period or the twentieth century. Left undiscussed is the long period between the ratification of the Constitution and the 1947 Supreme Court ruling in Everson v. Board of Education, which mandated that the Establishment Clause applied to state and local governments. Steven Green illuminates this neglected period, arguing that during the 19th century there was a "second disestablishment." By the early 1800s, formal political disestablishment was the rule at the national level, and almost universal among the states. Yet the United States remained a Christian nation, and Protestant beliefs and values dominated American culture and institutions. Evangelical Protestantism rose to cultural dominance through moral reform societies and behavioral laws that were undergirded by a maxim that Christianity formed part of the law. Simultaneously, law became secularized, religious pluralism increased, and the Protestant-oriented public education system was transformed. This latter impulse set the stage for the constitutional disestablishment of the twentieth century. The Second Disestablishment examines competing ideologies: of evangelical Protestants who sought to create a "Christian nation," and of those who advocated broader notions of separation of church and state. Green shows that the second disestablishment is the missing link between the Establishment Clause and the modern Supreme Court's church-state decisions.