Gott regiert Amerika


Book Description

Überblick anhand von ausgewählten Beispielen über das vitale und bunte religiöse Leben in den USA, das entscheidenden Einfluss auf Wirtschaft und Politik ausübt.




Carters Amerika


Book Description




God bless America


Book Description

Europäischen Beobachtern erscheinen die USA vertraut und fremd zugleich. Seit langem sind Coca-Cola, Hamburger und MTV zu einem festen Bestandteil unserer Kultur geworden. Auf betende amerikanische Präsidenten dagegen reagieren Europäer zumeist irritiert. Spätestens seit den jüngsten politischen Ereignissen wird offensichtlich, welche herausgehobenen Bedeutung der Religion in den USA zukommt. 13 Fachleute aus Deutschland und den USA beleuchten die verschiedenen Aspekte des komplexen, ja schillernden Verhältnisses von Politik und Religion in den USA. Welche Themen bewegen Juden und Katholiken, Evangelikale und schwarze Christen in den USA? Welche Organisationen greifen ihre religiös motivierten politischen Forderungen auf und welchen Erfolg haben ihre Lobby-Aktivitäten? Ist der amerikanische Präsident in seinen außenpolitischen Entscheidungen autonom oder muss er Rücksicht nehmen auf die Wünsche seiner evangelikal-fundamentalistischen, jüdischen oder katholischen Stammwählerklientel? Auf diese und eine Vielzahl anderer politisch relevanter Fragen geben die Beiträge des vorliegenden Bandes eine Antwort. Mit Beiträgen von Allison Calhoun-Brown, Manfred Berg, Manfred Brocker, Dietmar Herz, Detlef Junker, Daniel Goldberg, Antonius Liedhegener, Peter Lösche, Martin Marty, David R. Mayhew, Michael Minkenberg, Martin Riesebrodt und Clyde Wilcox.




Religion and Politics in the United States


Book Description

This sixth edition offers a comprehensive account of the role of religious ideas, institutions, and communities in American life. It contains expanded coverage of religion and gender politics and the politics of sexual diversity. Through a detailed review of the political attitudes and behavior of major religious and minority faith traditions, the book establishes that religion continues to be a major part of the American cultural and political milieu while explaining that it must interact with many other factors to influence political outcomes in the United States . This edition also reviews the role of religion in the 2008 election and includes fully up-to-date coverage of how religion informs the civil rights struggles of women and gay Americans. Although the text mainly covers religion and politics within the United States, a dialogue of the centrality and complexity of religious activism in Western liberal cultures provides a useful comparative framework.




Religion in America


Book Description

Although the Founding Fathers were at pains to separate church and state in the constitution of the United States, a narrative that casts American identity as the outcome of a progression towards freedom, culminating in the Puritan colonies, has always exerted considerable influence.




Faith of Our Fathers


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Silent No More


Book Description

This book chronicles Paul Findley's far-flung trial of discovery, the false stereotypes of Islam that linger in the minds of the American people, the corrective actions that the leaders of American's seven million Muslims are undertaking, and the community's remarkable progress in mainstream politics.




Toward Benevolent Neutrality


Book Description




Babel of the Atlantic


Book Description

Despite shifting trends in the study of Oceanic Atlantic history, the colonial Atlantic world as it is described by historians today continues to be a largely English-only space; even when other language communities are examined, they, too, are considered to be monolingual and discrete. Babel of the Atlantic pushes back against this monolingual fallacy by documenting multilingualism, translation, and fluid movement across linguistic borders. Focusing on Philadelphia and surrounding areas that include Germantown, Bethlehem, and the so-called Indian country to the west, this volume demonstrates the importance of viewing inhabitants not as members of isolated language communities, whether English, German, Lenape, Mohican, or others, but as creators of a vibrant zone of mixed languages and shifting politics. Organized around four themes—religion, education, race and abolitionism, and material culture and architecture—and drawing from archives such as almanacs, newspapers, and the material world, the chapters in this volume show how polyglot, tolerant, and multilingual spaces encouraged diverse peoples to coexist. Contributors examine subjects such as the multicultural Moravian communities in colonial Pennsylvania, the Charity School movement of the 1750s, and the activities of Quaker abolitionists, showing how educational and religious movements addressed and embraced cultural and linguistic variety. Drawing early American scholarship beyond the normative narrative of monolingualism, this volume will be invaluable to historians and sociolinguists whose work focuses on Pennsylvania and colonial, revolutionary, and antebellum America. In addition to the editor, the contributors include Craig Atwood, Patrick M. Erben, Cynthia G. Falk, Katherine Faull, Wolfgang Flügel, Katharine Gerbner, Maruice Jackson, Lisa Minardi, Jürgen Overhoff, and Birte Pfleger.