Katherine Stewart

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Katherine Stewart


Born
Boston, Massachusetts, The United States
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Katherine Stewart is an American journalist and author who often writes about issues related to the separation of church and state, the rise of religious nationalism, and global movements against liberal democracy.

Average rating: 4.25 · 4,138 ratings · 676 reviews · 3 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Power Worshippers: Insi...

4.26 avg rating — 2,357 ratings — published 2020 — 7 editions
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Money, Lies, and God: Insid...

4.23 avg rating — 1,317 ratings5 editions
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The Good News Club: The Chr...

4.26 avg rating — 464 ratings — published 2012 — 10 editions
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Quotes by Katherine Stewart  (?)
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“Listening to the debates about public schools on the Christian Right, one hears plenty of opposing opinions and a great deal of confusion. Some want to change the schools, others want to leave them. But the smart money seems to know what it is doing. It provides support for programs like the Good News Club, which slowly erode the support for public education in the country at large and in their own constituency in particular. And then it lays the groundwork for dismantling public education in favor of a private system of religious education funded by the state.”
Katherine Stewart, The Good News Club: The Christian Right's Stealth Assault on America’s Children

“As the historian and author Randall Balmer writes, “It wasn’t until 1979—a full six years after Roe—that evangelical leaders, at the behest of conservative activist Paul Weyrich, seized on abortion not for moral reasons, but as a rallying-cry to deny President Jimmy Carter a second term. Why? Because the anti-abortion crusade was more palatable than the religious right’s real motive: protecting segregated schools.”33”
Katherine Stewart, The Power Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism

“The many paradoxes and contradictions of Christian nationalism make sense when they are taken out of the artificial ‘culture war’ framing and placed within the history of the antidemocratic reaction in the United States. To any outside observer, it must seem odd that Christian nationalists loudly reject ‘government’ as a matter of principle even as they seek government power to impose their religious vision on the rest of society. America’s slaveholders, too, revealed a similar inconsistency when they championed “states’ rights” and at the same time demanded the assistance of the federal government in catching runaway slaves and defending the slave system.”
Katherine Stewart, The Power Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism

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