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American Evangelicals and the 1960s

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In the late 1970s, the New Christian Right emerged as a formidable political force, boldly announcing itself as a unified movement representing the views of a "moral majority." But that movement did not spring fully formed from its predecessors. American Evangelicals and the 1960s refutes the thesis that evangelical politics were a purely inflammatory backlash against the cultural and political upheaval of the decade.

            Bringing together fresh research and innovative interpretations, this book demonstrates that evangelicals actually participated in broader American developments during "the long 1960s," that the evangelical constituency was more diverse than often noted, and that the notion of right-wing evangelical politics as a backlash was a later creation serving the interests of both Republican-conservative alliances and their critics. Evangelicalism's involvement with —rather than its reaction against —the main social movements, public policy initiatives, and cultural transformations of the 1960s proved significant in its 1970s political ascendance. Twelve essays that range thematically from the oil industry to prison ministry and from American counterculture to the Second Vatican Council depict modern evangelicalism both as a religious movement with its own internal dynamics and as one fully integrated into general American history.

292 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2013

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Axel R. Schäfer

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Profile Image for Roger Green.
327 reviews29 followers
May 8, 2016
This is a helpful and nuanced collection of essays that complicate the historical picture of evangelicalism in the United States. Well researched, the essays cover broad thematic topics associated with the 1960s, from civil rights issues to Vietnam to the sexual revolution to the New Left. Much of it is materialist history, drawing on Christian periodicals. My only complaint is the absence of a separate chapter on drug-related issues.
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