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Village Atheists - How America's Unbelievers Made Their Way in a Godly Nation (Hardcover)
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Village Atheists - How America's Unbelievers Made Their Way in a Godly Nation (Hardcover)
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A much-maligned minority throughout American history, atheists have
been cast as a threat to the nation's moral fabric, barred from
holding public office, and branded as irreligious misfits in a
nation chosen by God. Yet, village atheists--as these godless
freethinkers came to be known by the close of the nineteenth
century--were also hailed for their gutsy dissent from stultifying
pieties and for posing a necessary secularist challenge to
majoritarian entanglements of church and state. Village Atheists
explores the complex cultural terrain that unbelievers have long
had to navigate in their fight to secure equal rights and liberties
in American public life. Leigh Eric Schmidt rebuilds the history of
American secularism from the ground up, giving flesh and blood to
these outspoken infidels, including itinerant lecturer Samuel
Porter Putnam; rough-edged cartoonist Watson Heston; convicted
blasphemer Charles B. Reynolds; and atheist sex reformer Elmina D.
Slenker. He describes their everyday confrontations with devout
neighbors and evangelical ministers, their strained efforts at
civility alongside their urge to ridicule and offend their
Christian compatriots. Schmidt examines the multilayered world of
social exclusion, legal jeopardy, yet also civic acceptance in
which American atheists and secularists lived. He shows how it was
only in the middle decades of the twentieth century that
nonbelievers attained a measure of legal vindication, yet even then
they often found themselves marginalized on the edges of a
God-trusting, Bible-believing nation. Village Atheists reveals how
the secularist vision for the United States proved to be anything
but triumphant and age-defining for a country where faith and
citizenship were--and still are--routinely interwoven.
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