From the early narratives of such colonial writers as Jonathan
Edwards to the more recent conversion experiences of Jim Bakker,
Jerry Falwell, and Pat Robertson, America is rich in both
conversions and autobiographies. This volume provides a sourcebook
for the study of American religious conversion narratives. It
includes entries providing biographical, bibliographic, and
critical commentary on thirty significant writers of conversion
narratives. The subjects include writers of early colonial America,
such as Mary Rowlandson and John Woolman, nineteenth-century women
writers, such as Carry Nation and Ann Eliza Young, and writers from
the twentieth-century social gospel movement, such as John Cogley
and Dorothy Day. Chapters on subjects such as Jim Bakker give
insight into the rise of televangelism. Finally, chapters on such
writers as Frederick Douglass, Eldridge Cleaver, and Piri Thomas
cover the conversion experiences of those who lived outside
mainstream American culture.
The chapters are arranged alphabetically. Each one is divided
into sections providing a short biography, discussing the
narrative, covering criticism of the narrative, and a bibliography.
The work concludes with a bibliographic essay and a full subject
index.
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