Religions of the United States in Practice, Volume 2
By (Author) Colleen McDannell
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
28th January 2002
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
History of the Americas
200.973
Paperback
488
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
765g
The Religions of the United States in Practice is a rich anthology of primary sources with accompanying essays that examines religious behavior in America. From praying in an early American synagogue to reading anti-Catholic novels to performing Haitian Voudou baptism, the volumes explore faith through action. The documents and essays consider the religious practices of average people - praying, singing, healing, teaching, imagining, and persuading. Some documents are formal liturgies, while others texts describe more spontaneous religious actions. Because religious practices also take place in the imagination, dreams, visions, and fictional accounts are also included. Accompanying each primary document is an essay that sets the religious practice in its historical and theological context - making this volume ideal for classroom use and accessible to general readers. The introductory essays explain the various meanings of religious practices as lived out in churches and synagogues, in parlors and fields, beside rivers, on lecture platforms, and in the streets. Volume I moves from Colonial days to the end of the nineteenth century. Among the fascinating subjects covered are Early American hymns. Dutch-American wedding ceremonies, witchcraft in Puritan culture, Mormon healing rituals, Muskogee corn ceremonies, anti-Catholic pornography, debates over cremation. Volume 2 continues into the twentieth century, exploring such practices as Pentecostal prayer services, the singing of Hanukkah songs, debates over ordaining women, Buddhist chanting, the guitar mass, speaking in tongues, vision quests, Jewish mourning practices, and Charismatic renewal among Latino Catholics. The Religions of the United States in Practice offers a sampling of religious perspectives that approximates the living texture of popular religious thought and practice in the United States. The history of religion in America is more than the story of institutions and famous people. This anthology presents an engrossing and nuanced story composed of the everyday actions and thoughts of lay men and women.
"This anthology presents the reader with a rich sampling of the ways in which American religion has been practiced. It implicitly challenges some of the standard temporal and thematic categories through which American religion has been understood. The volumes will be useful as reference works and in courses about American religious history. There is much here that does not appear in standard treatments of the subject."Robert Wuthnow, Princeton University
Colleen McDannell is Sterling M. McMurrin Professor of Religious Studies and Professor of History at the University of Utah. She is the author of Material Christianity: Religion and Popular Culture in America and The Christian Home in Victorian America: 1840-1900 and a coauthor of Heaven: A History.