Bearing Witness Against Sin: The Evangelical Birth of the American Social Movement

Couverture
University of Chicago Press, 2006 - 256 pages

During the 1830s the United States experienced a wave of movements for social change over temperance, the abolition of slavery, anti-vice activism, and a host of other moral reforms. Michael Young argues for the first time in Bearing Witness against Sin that together they represented a distinctive new style of mobilization—one that prefigured contemporary forms of social protest by underscoring the role of national religious structures and cultural schemas.

In this book, Young identifies a new strain of protest that challenged antebellum Americans to take personal responsibility for reforming social problems.In this period activists demanded that social problems like drinking and slaveholding be recognized as national sins unsurpassed in their evil and immorality. This newly awakened consciousness undergirded by a confessional style of protest, seized the American imagination and galvanized thousands of people. Such a phenomenon, Young argues, helps explain the lives of charismatic reformers such as William Lloyd Garrison and the Grimké sisters, among others.

Marshalling lively historical materials, including letters and life histories of reformers, Bearing Witness against Sin is a revelatory account of how religion lay at the heart of social reform.

 

Table des matières

Modern Social Movements and Confessional Projections
10
Mammon Church and State in a Restless America
39
The Benevolent Empire and
54
Rise Up and Repent
86
A National Wave of Confessional Protests 18291839
118
To Bear Witness to the Horrors of
154
For the Movement and for Myself
198
Notes
209
Reference List
237
Index
251
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À propos de l'auteur (2006)

Michael P. Young is assistant professor of sociology at the University of Texas at Austin.

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