The second of two volumes on the relationship between popular
religion and the self-help tradition in American culture, this book
continues chronologically where the first left off. As with the
first volume, this work focuses on the intersection of American
history and popular religion and is intended as an introductory
interpretive guide to major self-help figures and movements with
origins in popular religious movements. This volume spans from
Romanticism, the Gilded Age, and the history of Christian Science,
with discussions of Mary Baker Patterson, Phineas Parkhurst Quimby,
and Mary Baker Eddy, through Norman Vincent Peale and Robert
Schuller. Peale and Schuller, with the exception of Evangelist
Billy Graham, constitute the public face of mainstream American
Protestantism and bring this two-volume study to its conclusion in
the second half of the 20th century.
This reference will serve as a valuable research tool for
American religion and popular culture scholars. Together with the
first volume, "Self-Help and Popular Religion in Early American
Culture," these two meticulously researched volumes clearly define
and present the broad scope of the self-help tradition as it
pervades American culture and as it developed and was influenced by
popular religion. An extensive bibliography is included.
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