Description |
1 online resource (278 pages) |
Contents |
Enlarging the faith: books and the marketing of liberal religion in a consumer culture -- Religious book club: middlebrow culture and liberal Protestant seeker spirituality -- Publishing for seekers:Eugene Exman and the religious bestsellers of Harper & Brothers -- Religious reading mobilized: the book programs of World War II -- Inventing interfaith: the wartime reading campaign of the National Conference Of Christians And Jews -- Religious reading in the wake of war: American spirituality in the 1940s |
Summary |
In 'The Rise of Liberal Religion' Matthew Hedstrom tells the story of how, beginning in the 1920s, American religious leaders joined forces with the publishing industry in an attempt to form a 'spiritual center' - a set of widely accepted religious ideas practices, and presuppositions that would hold together a fragmenting society, create new markets for books, and maintain the privileged status of these arbiters in American religious discourse |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
English |
|
Print version record |
Subject |
Liberalism (Religion) -- United States -- History -- 20th century
|
|
Religious literature, American -- Publishing -- History -- 20th century
|
|
RELIGION -- History.
|
|
TRAVEL -- Special Interest -- Religious.
|
|
Liberalism (Religion)
|
|
Religion
|
SUBJECT |
United States -- Religion -- History -- 20th century
|
Subject |
United States
|
Genre/Form |
History
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
LC no. |
2012004647 |
ISBN |
9780199705603 |
|
0199705607 |
|
1283858363 |
|
9781283858366 |
|
0190452005 |
|
9780190452001 |
|