Any time one sets out to write an overview of history, they are prone to skimp on certain aspects and highlight others. Daniel McKanan writes about the involvement of religious people, groups and institutions in the movement of the Left through the first 2 centuries of U.S. history. He covers a wealth of movements and individuals in ways that shed new light on the role of religion in the American progressive movement. While at times it seems to confine his comments to the most radical of movements, as he moved into the 1960's, 1970's AND 1980'S I found that I could identify who he was discussing because I had lived through those days, participated in those movements and read those writers. Overall, his treatment is fair and shows the connections between 19th century abolitionism, early 20 century socialism, the labor movement of the 1930's, the influence of Gandhi in the 1940's and 1950's, the civil rights and anti Vietnam movements of the 1950's and 1960's and the impact of all those movements to radical movements today.
He ends the book on a sober note, wondering if radicalism ended with the fall of the Berlin Wall and the demise of the Soviet Union in 1989. For many early 20th century radicals, Lenin's revolution was a vision of the hoped-for future. With the disintegration of that vision, the Left has had to turn to a resistance to capitalism rather than an embrace of socialism. I was surprised that he did not speak to the the anti WTO marches in Seattle and elsewhere, and the book came out before Occupy Wall St took off. What this book challenges and reminds us is that religion/spirituality has had and continues to have a vital role in improving the life of all people in society