This collection contains a rich variety of fascinating documents--letters, sermons, court records, personal narratives, and the like--that chronicle the multifaceted drama of American religious history. Volume 2 of this second edition covers the years from 1865 to 1993.
A Documentary History of Religion in America by Edwin S. Gaustad, Heath W. Carter, and Mark A. Noll
This in-depth look at religion in North America uses first person documents to trace religious beliefs and their impact on exploration, interaction with others, politics, war, societal issues and more. It was originally two volumes that have been condensed into one large book that will no doubt be used to teach courses and also be used as a reference source.
Eight chapters that cover nearly 800 pages include photos, documents, letters, impressions, tweets, interviews and other first person documents that assist in giving insight into at least what those spotlighted were thinking and feeling when they recorded what they did. As with any such first person narrative – there will be bias. And, though what is recorded is personal truth it very well may not be the total truth or give insight into what others of the time may have thought and felt. Each chapter has supplemental suggested reading relevant to the information presented. I am not sure what guidelines were adopted by the current editors of this tome but do admire them for undertaking this herculean task.
Thank you to NetGalley and Willam B. Erdman’s Plublishing Company for the ARC – This is my honest review.
The first edition of this mammoth book was published in 1982 and edited by Edwin Gaustad (1923-2011). His aim was in part ‘to enable the “amateur” to reconstruct the religious history of America with the building blocks provided here’. The first three editions of the book comprised two volumes. This fourth edition is a condensed one-volume edition and takes us from the sixteenth century up to the Trump presidency. Inevitably this has meant a reduction in the number of documents form the first editions but also the inclusion of newer documents.
Heath Carter has taken up the reins from Gusted and Mark Noll, who co-edited the third (2003) edition. The format here is similar to the previous incarnations. But Carter has taken the opportunity to update ‘some of the contents and approaches in order to reflect the latest scholarship in the field’ (xvii). He also puts the focus on public rather than private aspects of religion. What is presented here is an impressive display of primary sources and illustrations. Each of the chapters has an introduction as well as an impressive number of primary sources and end with an annotated list of suggested readings.
Typical of the chapters is the final chapter 8: ‘Into the new millennium’. It begins with a brief 4-page overview and then under the headings of Pluralism and politics, Trauma and transition, Religion and national upheaval has selections from diverse a range of writers and social commentators as Billy Graham, George W. Bush, Albert Mohler, Jr., Jim Wallis, and interviews with Arsalan Iftikhar and Eric Metaxas reading the Trump presidency. The chapter concludes with a two-page essay on suggested reading.
This book will invaluable for anyone interested in the wide range of religion in America. It lives up to the aim of its original editor in that any amateur will find plenty of building blocks here to understand the religious history of America.
I finally was able to download this book and I was amazed! It took me a week of late night hours to read. I did not read everything because I am no religious scholar by any means and will not try to claim that I understood half of what I read! I had to look up so many words sometimes just to understand the paragraphs. With all that being said and clarified! This book is truly a remarkable collaborative effort of documenting to make sure that history is not forgotten or ignored or that it gets understood. This is an awesome tool for research and development and resources! I believe this needs to be in school libraries and church libraries regardless of your secularism. I’m from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. What a wonderful work of art! Thank you to the authors of this book.
I received an advanced copy from NetGalley and this is my willingly given thoughts and opinions!
This is an incredible compilation of speeches, letters, and essays that do not just give an overview history, but an in depth look at the attitudes and motivations of the people of the time.
I would recommend A Documentary History of Religion in America as a textbook for History of Christianity courses, as well as general history courses and those courses focused on surveys of religious thought. The book could also have appeal for literature classes that wish to go beyond the traditional readings and explore background and context.
Comprehensive, detailed, and exhaustive, A Documentary History of Religion in America shows that the authors have done their homework.