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In 1979, Peter Steinfels identified a new movement and predicted it
would be the decade's most enduring legacy to American politics. In
a new Introduction he describes its evolution from a reaction to
Sixties' social change into an entrenched political force promoting
an assertive, even belligerent, foreign policy. More than three
decades ago, in The Neoconservatives, Peter Steinfels described a
nascent movement, predicting that it would be the sixties' "most
enduring legacy to American politics." Now, in a new foreword to
that portrait, he traces neoconservatism's fateful transformation.
What was a movement of dissenting intellectuals creating a new,
modern kind of conservatism became a phalanx of political insiders
urging the nation to flex its muscles overseas. The
Neoconservatives describes the founders of the movement,
disenchanted liberals recoiling from the turmoil of the sixties, a
decline in authority, and a loss of tough-minded leadership at home
and abroad. Written contemporaneously to the birth of a movement
that would profoundly mark American history, The Neoconservatives
holds clues, Stein-fels argues, to how and why neoconservatism
swerved from its original promise even as it successfully implanted
itself as an influential and aggressive element in our politics.
This is a landmark book, "an important contribution to
understanding the influence of ideas on American politics"
(Congress Monthly).
Sheed & Ward, in partnership with the Commonweal Foundation and
with funding from the Pew Charitable Trust, proudly presents the
first of two volumes in a groundbreaking series called American
Catholics in the Public Square. The result of a three-year study
sponsored by Pew aimed at understanding the contributions to U.S.
civic life of the Catholic, Jewish, mainline and evangelical
Protestant, African-American, Latino, and Muslim communities in the
United States, the two volumes in this series gather selected
essays from the Commonweal Colloquia and the joint meetings
organized by the Commonweal Foundation and The Faith and Reason
Institute, a conservative think tank in Washington. Participants in
the Commonweal colloquia and the joint meetings-leading Catholic
scholars, journalists, lawyers, business and labor leaders,
novelists and poets, church administrators and lobbyists,
activists, policy makers and politicians-produced approximately
forty-five essays presented at ten meetings that brought together
over two hundred and fifty participants. The two volumes in the
American Catholics in the Public Square Series address many of the
most critical issues now facing the Catholic Church in the United
States by drawing from the four goals of the colloquia-to identify,
assess, and critique the distinctive elements in Catholicism's
approach to civic life; to generate concrete analyses and
recommendations for strengthening Catholic civic engagement; to
encompass a broad spectrum of political and social views of
Catholics to encourage dialogue between Catholic leaders, religious
and secular media, and political thinkers; to reexamine the
long-standing Catholic belief in the obligation to promote the
common good and to clarify how Catholics may work better with those
holding other religious or philosophical convictions toward
revitalizing both the religious environment and civic participation
in the American republic. This first volume, American Catholics and
Civic Engagement: A Distinctive Voice, includes a general
introduction by Peter Steinfels and is structured in four parts,
each of which include a brief overview. Part One, Catholic Thought
in the American Context, explore the fundamental concepts that
underlie Catholic social thought and their relevance to American
public debate and public policy-the intellectual tools with which
Catholics have often participated in the public square. Part Two,
Catholic Institutions in the American Public Square, reveals the
Church's vast presence in the American public square-from the
church steeples that dot urban landscapes to primary and secondary
schools, colleges and universities, hospitals, clinics and nursing
homes, social service centers, orphanages, and shelters-and
provides a detailed analysis of the place of the parish in the
public square, the activities of the bishops' conferences in New
York, Wisconsin, and the California, and the challenges facing
Catholic health care providers. Part Three, Catholics in the Public
Square: Autobiographies, includes the personal stories of
politicians, journalists, lawyers, business executives, and labor
leaders who describe how their faith shaped and is shaped by their
work. Part Four, Catholics in the Voting Booth, relies on data from
two wide-ranging surveys of how Catholics vote and assesses the
impact on Catholic voters of the Catholic social tradition, of
sermons, of parish community and sacramental life, and of papal and
episcopal statements.
In this widely acclaimed book that will long remain an
indispensable work on American religion and the Catholic Church,
one of its most influential laymen in the United States says that
the Roman Catholic Church in America must either reform profoundly
or lapse into irreversible decline. In addition to providing a
spiritual identity for over 60 million Americans, the church is the
nation's largest nongovernmental provider of education and social
services, as well as the largest not-for-profit provider of health
care. But even before the recent revelations about sex abuse by
priests, American Catholicism was already heading for a major
crisis, with its traditional leadership depleted by the decline in
religious vocations and paralyzed by "theological gridlock."
Catholicism in the United States confronts hard choices among
contrasting visions for the future, choices with huge implications
for American life. Analyzing these choices in ways that escape all
the familiar labels of conservative or liberal, Steinfels points to
the directions the church must take to survive.
THE BEST OF THE CATHOLIC INTELLECTUAL TRADITION
For 75 years, "Commonweal" magazine has sought to bring Catholic
faith and modern life -- especially the experience of American
freedom and diversity -- into fruitful contact. Now "Commonweal
Confronts the Century" not only marks the anniversary of this
distinguished journal, it also traces the ways in which the
Catholic intellectual tradition has struggled with modernity,
democratic institutions, and American culture while remaining
faithful to its heritage.
Collected here are many of the most provocative essays the journal
has published by a number of the century's most distinguished
writers and thinkers. Together they confront controversial issues
of continuing relevance within both the Catholic Church and
American society in general. In the pages of "Commonweal, " liberal
Catholics have carried on a dialogue about American culture and
politics, the arts, religious pluralism, domestic upheaval, war and
peace, liberal freedoms, and new moral and sexual sensibilities.
Here is a feast of argument, observations, and good writing that
will appeal to both the religiously informed and the intellectually
curious. Highlights of "Commonweal Confronts the Century" include:
Dorothy Day on poverty
Graham Greene on his religious conversion
Thomas Merton on nuclear war
Jean Bethke Elshtain on gay marriage
Daniel Callahan on health care
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