Earnestly Contending: Religious Freedom and Pluralism in Antebellum America
ISBN: 9780813933641
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / University of Virginia Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter



In Earnestly Contending, Dickson Bruce examines the ways in which religious denominations and movements in antebellum America coped with the ideals of freedom and pluralism that exerted such a strong influence on the larger, national culture. Despite their enormous normative power, these still-evolving ideals--themselves partly religious in origin--ran up against deeply entrenched concerns about the integrity of religious faith and commitment and the role of religion in society. The resulting tensions between these ideals and desires for religious consensus and coherence would remain unresolved throughout the period.

Focusing on that era's interdenominational competition, Bruce explores the possibilities for and barriers to realizing ideals of freedom and pluralism in antebellum America. He examines the nature of religion from the perspectives of anthropology and cognitive sciences, as well as history, and uses this interdisciplinary approach to organize and understand specific tendencies in the antebellum period while revealing properties inherent in religion as a social and cultural phenomenon. He goes on to show how issues from that era have continued to play a role in American religious thinking, and how they might shed light on the controversies of our own time.


Dickson D. Bruce Jr., Professor Emeritus of History at the University of California, Irvine, is the author most recently of The Kentucky Tragedy: A Story of Conflict and Change in Antebellum America and The Origins of African American Literature, 1680-1865 (Virginia).

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