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America's Book - The Rise and Decline of a Bible Civilization, 1794-1911 (Hardcover)
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America's Book - The Rise and Decline of a Bible Civilization, 1794-1911 (Hardcover)
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America's Book shows how the Bible decisively shaped American
national history even as that history influenced the use of
Scripture. It explores the rise of a strongly Protestant Bible
civilization in the early United States that was then fractured by
debates over slavery, contested by growing numbers of
non-Protestant Americans (Catholics, Jews, agnostics), and torn
apart by the Civil War. This first comprehensive history of the
Bible in America explains why Tom Paine's anti-biblical tract The
Age of Reason (1794) precipitated such dramatic effects, how
innovations in printing by the American Bible Society created the
nation's publishing industry, why Nat Turner's slave rebellion of
1831 and the bitter election of 1844 marked turning points in the
nation's engagement with Scripture, and why Theodore Roosevelt and
Woodrow Wilson were so eager to commemorate the 300th anniversary
of the King James Version of the Bible. Noll's magisterial work
highlights not only the centrality of the Bible for the nation's
most influential religious figures (Methodist Francis Asbury,
Richard Allen of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, Catholic
Bishop Francis Kenrick, Jewish scholar Solomon Schechter, agnostic
Robert Ingersoll), but also why it was important for presidents
like Abraham Lincoln; notable American women like Harriet Beecher
Stowe, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Frances Willard; dedicated
campaigners for civil rights like Frederick Douglass and Francis
Grimke; lesser-known figures like Black authors Maria Stewart and
Harriet Jacobs; and a host of others of high estate and low. The
book also illustrates how the more religiously plural period from
Reconstruction to the early twentieth century saw Scripture become
a much more fragmented, though still significant, force in American
culture, particularly as a source of hope and moral authority for
Americans on both sides of the battle over white supremacy-both for
those hoping to fight it, and for others seeking to justify it.
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