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Volumn 1, Issue 1, 2008, Pages 85-112

Two American Jeremiads: Traditionalist and Progressive Stories of American Nationhood

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EID: 78650713759     PISSN: 17550483     EISSN: 17440491     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1017/S1755048308000059     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (4)

References (143)
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    • The 700 Club, 13 September 2001. See also, Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press
    • The 700 Club, 13 September 2001. See also Bruce Lincoln, Holy Terrors: Thinking about Religion after September 11 (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2003).
    • (2003) Holy Terrors: Thinking about Religion after September 11
    • Lincoln, B.1
  • 2
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    • For just a few such accounts, by several of its more prominent articulators, see, Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans
    • For just a few such accounts, by several of its more prominent articulators, see Richard John Neuhaus, The Naked Public Square: Religion and Democracy in America (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1984);
    • (1984) The Naked Public Square: Religion and Democracy in America
    • Neuhaus, R.J.1
  • 3
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    • Garden City, NY: Doubleday and Company, Inc.
    • Jerry Falwell, Listen, America (Garden City, NY: Doubleday and Company, Inc., 1980);
    • (1980) Listen, America
    • Falwell, J.1
  • 4
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    • Dallas: Word Publishing, The composite narrative offered in Section II will be taken primarily from these authors, who have played a critical role in the rise of the Christian right as a political movement
    • Ralph Reed, Politically Incorrect: The Emerging Faith Factor in American Politics (Dallas: Word Publishing, 1994). The composite narrative offered in Section II will be taken primarily from these authors, who have played a critical role in the rise of the Christian right as a political movement.
    • (1994) Politically Incorrect: The Emerging Faith Factor in American Politics
    • Reed, R.1
  • 6
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    • Outrage at Funderal Protests Pushes Lawmakers to Act
    • The church's response to Katrina appears on its website, http://www.godhatesfags.com. Westboro's practice of protesting at the funerals of American servicepersons killed in Iraq, while holding signs declaring “Thank God for Dead Soldiers,” brought the rhetoric of divine punishment to a new level of public scrutiny during the first decade of the twenty-first century, leading to legislative action and even an inventive counter protest, in which members of a Vietnam Veterans' motorcycle group provided a human barrier to allow the funerals to proceed uninterrupted. See, April 17
    • The church's response to Katrina appears on its website, http://www.godhatesfags.com. Westboro's practice of protesting at the funerals of American servicepersons killed in Iraq, while holding signs declaring “Thank God for Dead Soldiers,” brought the rhetoric of divine punishment to a new level of public scrutiny during the first decade of the twenty-first century, leading to legislative action and even an inventive counter protest, in which members of a Vietnam Veterans' motorcycle group provided a human barrier to allow the funerals to proceed uninterrupted. See “Outrage at Funderal Protests Pushes Lawmakers to Act,” New York Times April 17, 2006.
    • (2006) New York Times
  • 7
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    • The two classic treatments of the jeremiad's deep roots in the American tradition are, Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, and
    • The two classic treatments of the jeremiad's deep roots in the American tradition are Sacvan Bercovitch, The American Jeremiad (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1978); and
    • (1978) The American Jeremiad
    • Bercovitch, S.1
  • 8
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    • Cambridge, Mass. and London: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, As will become clear in the next section, I am offering a related, though somewhat more generic, definition. I elaborate both the theoretical and historical elements of this argument in my forthcoming
    • Perry Miller, The New England Mind: From Colony to Province (Cambridge, Mass. and London: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1953). As will become clear in the next section, I am offering a related, though somewhat more generic, definition. I elaborate both the theoretical and historical elements of this argument in my forthcoming
    • (1953) The New England Mind: From Colony to Province
    • Miller, P.1
  • 13
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    • Augustine and the Rhetoric of Roman Decline
    • See my, and
    • See my “Augustine and the Rhetoric of Roman Decline,” History of Political Thought 26: 4 (2005), 586–606; and
    • (2005) History of Political Thought , vol.26 , Issue.4 , pp. 586-606
  • 14
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    • Environmentalism and the Recurrent Rhetoric of Decline
    • Spring, also
    • “Environmentalism and the Recurrent Rhetoric of Decline,” Environmental Ethics 25: 1 (Spring 2003), 79–98; also
    • (2003) Environmental Ethics , vol.25 , Issue.1 , pp. 79-98
  • 17
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    • Urbana: University of Illinois Press, and
    • Robert T. Hughes, Myths America Lives By (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2002); and
    • (2002) Myths America Lives By
    • Hughes, R.T.1
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    • Narrative, Free Space, and Political Leadership in Social Movements
    • See
    • See Richard Coutu, “Narrative, Free Space, and Political Leadership in Social Movements,” Journal of Politics 55 (1993), 57–79.
    • (1993) Journal of Politics , vol.55 , pp. 57-79
    • Coutu, R.1
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    • The moral decline-divine punishment narrative represents a particularly salient version of cultural politics in the American tradition; for the best recent treatment of this phenomenon, see, Princeton: Princeton University Press
    • The moral decline-divine punishment narrative represents a particularly salient version of cultural politics in the American tradition; for the best recent treatment of this phenomenon, see David C. Leege, Kenneth D. Wald, Brian S. Krueger, and Paul D. Mueller, The Politics of Cultural Difference: Social Change and Voter Mobilization Strategies in the Post-New Deal Period (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2002).
    • (2002) The Politics of Cultural Difference: Social Change and Voter Mobilization Strategies in the Post-New Deal Period
    • Leege, D.C.1    Wald, K.D.2    Krueger, B.S.3    Mueller, P.D.4
  • 22
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    • Trusting the Tale: The Narrativist Turn in the Human Sciences
    • The attention to narrative among political scientists is a specific example of a more general explosion of interest in narrative across the humanities and social sciences: for overviews, see
    • The attention to narrative among political scientists is a specific example of a more general explosion of interest in narrative across the humanities and social sciences: for overviews, see Martin Kreiswirth, “Trusting the Tale: The Narrativist Turn in the Human Sciences,” New Literary History 23 (1992), 629–657.
    • (1992) New Literary History , vol.23 , pp. 629-657
    • Kreiswirth, M.1
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    • Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press
    • Anthony Paul Kerby, Narrative and the Self (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1991), 53–56.
    • (1991) Narrative and the Self , pp. 53-56
    • Kerby, A.P.1
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    • The Narrative Quality of Experience
    • Gutterman, Prophetic Politics
    • Stephen Crites, “The Narrative Quality of Experience,” in Why Narrative?, 69–71.; Gutterman, Prophetic Politics.
    • Why Narrative? , pp. 69-71
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    • A Place for Stories: Nature, History, and Narrative
    • William Cronon, “A Place for Stories: Nature, History, and Narrative,” Journal of American History 78 (1992), 1349.
    • (1992) Journal of American History , vol.78 , pp. 1349
    • Cronon, W.1
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    • For just a sampling of a voluminous literature, see, New York: Basic, and
    • For just a sampling of a voluminous literature, see James Davison Hunter, Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America (New York: Basic, 1991); and
    • (1991) Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America
    • Hunter, J.D.1
  • 41
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    • For just one of these premature reports of demise, see, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, A more nuanced understanding of the appeal of the Christian Right is presented by
    • For just one of these premature reports of demise, see Michael D'Antonio, Fall from Grace: The Failed Crusade of the Christian Right (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1992). A more nuanced understanding of the appeal of the Christian Right is presented by
    • (1992) Fall from Grace: The Failed Crusade of the Christian Right
    • D'Antonio, M.1
  • 42
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    • Changing Fortunes: An Analysis of Christian Right Ascendance within American Political Discourse
    • March
    • Ronald E. Hopson and Donald R. Smith, “Changing Fortunes: An Analysis of Christian Right Ascendance within American Political Discourse,” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 38: 1 (March 1999), 1–13.
    • (1999) Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion , vol.38 , Issue.1 , pp. 1-13
    • Hopson, R.E.1    Smith, D.R.2
  • 43
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    • The Bible, Politics, and Democracy
    • ed. Richard John Neuhaus (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans
    • Edward Dobson, “The Bible, Politics, and Democracy,” in The Bible, Politics, and Democracy, ed. Richard John Neuhaus (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1987), 3.
    • (1987) The Bible, Politics, and Democracy , pp. 3
    • Dobson, E.1
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    • Fundamentalism: A Defensive Offensive
    • ed. Richard John Neuhaus and Michael Cromartie (Washington, DC: Ethics and Public Policy Center/University Press of America
    • Nathan Glazer, “Fundamentalism: A Defensive Offensive,” in Piety and Politics: Evangelicals and Fundamentalists Confront the World, ed. Richard John Neuhaus and Michael Cromartie (Washington, DC: Ethics and Public Policy Center/University Press of America, 1987).
    • (1987) Piety and Politics: Evangelicals and Fundamentalists Confront the World
    • Glazer, N.1
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    • Future-Word: An Agenda for the Eighties
    • Listen, America, 183, ed. Jerry Falwell, with Ed Dobson and Ed Hinson (Garden City, NY: Doubleday
    • Listen, America, 183; Falwell, “Future-Word: An Agenda for the Eighties,” in The Fundamentalist Phenomenon: The Resurgence of Conservative Christianity, ed. Jerry Falwell, with Ed Dobson and Ed Hinson (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1981), 203.
    • (1981) The Fundamentalist Phenomenon: The Resurgence of Conservative Christianity , pp. 203
    • Falwell1
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    • Later in the same volume, Falwell offered his view that contemporary feminism is driven by a small number of women who never accepted their God-given roles (150)
    • Listen, America, 123. Later in the same volume, Falwell offered his view that contemporary feminism is driven by a small number of women who never accepted their God-given roles (150).
    • Listen, America , pp. 123
  • 51
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    • See also
    • Listen, America, 179; 253–254. See also
    • Listen, America , vol.179 , pp. 253-254
  • 54
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    • What the Fundamentalists Want
    • and
    • Neuhaus, “What the Fundamentalists Want,” in Piety and Politics, 16–18; and
    • Piety and Politics , pp. 16-18
    • Neuhaus1
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    • What do Religious Conservatives Really Want?
    • ed. Michael Cromartie (Washington, DC/Grand Rapids, MI: Ethics and Public Policy Center/Eerdmans, also
    • Reed, “What do Religious Conservatives Really Want?” in Disciples and Democracy: Religious Conservatives and the Future of American Politics, ed. Michael Cromartie (Washington, DC/Grand Rapids, MI: Ethics and Public Policy Center/Eerdmans, 1994), 6; also
    • (1994) Disciples and Democracy: Religious Conservatives and the Future of American Politics , pp. 6
    • Reed1
  • 59
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    • America Can Be Saved, 21-2; Listen, America, 30-34. See also Pat Robertson, America's Dates with Destiny, chs. 1-3; and, Nashville: Integrity Publishers
    • America Can Be Saved, 21-2; Listen, America, 30-34. See also Pat Robertson, America's Dates with Destiny, chs. 1-3; and Robertson, The Ten Offenses (Nashville: Integrity Publishers), 2–7.
    • The Ten Offenses , pp. 2-7
    • Robertson1
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    • See, Cambridge, MA, and London: Harvard University Press
    • See Philip Hamburger, Separation of Church and State (Cambridge, MA, and London: Harvard University Press, 2002).
    • (2002) Separation of Church and State
    • Hamburger, P.1
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    • The Almost-Chosen People: Why America is Different
    • ed. Richard John Neuhaus (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, also 9-12. See also
    • Paul Johnson, “The Almost-Chosen People: Why America is Different,” in Unsecular America, ed. Richard John Neuhaus (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1986), 6, also 9-12. See also
    • (1986) Unsecular America , pp. 6
    • Johnson, P.1
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    • God and the Americans
    • January, Johnson argues that the young American republic was “religious not necessarily in its forms but in its bones” (31)
    • Johnson, “God and the Americans,” Commentary January 1995, 31: Johnson argues that the young American republic was “religious not necessarily in its forms but in its bones” (31).
    • (1995) Commentary , pp. 31
    • Johnson1
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    • Religious Belief and the Constitutional Order
    • William J. Bennett, “Religious Belief and the Constitutional Order,” in Piety and Politics, 366.
    • Piety and Politics , pp. 366
    • Bennett, W.J.1
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    • Contrast, for example, the account of the American experience one finds in Eck, A New Religious America. For a comparable account, which would take issue with monolithic claims about Christian hegemony in the American past, see, Restless Souls
    • Contrast, for example, the account of the American experience one finds in Eck, A New Religious America. For a comparable account, which would take issue with monolithic claims about Christian hegemony in the American past, see Schmidt, Restless Souls.
    • Schmidt1
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    • See also: “This is a Christian nation” (Falwell, America Can Be Saved, 23); “The changes of the last half-century have had disastrous consequences for the nation”
    • Reed, Politically Incorrect, 36. See also: “This is a Christian nation” (Falwell, America Can Be Saved, 23); “The changes of the last half-century have had disastrous consequences for the nation”
    • Politically Incorrect , pp. 36
    • Reed1
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    • Contrast Douglass's reaction to Lincoln's first inaugural (“How sadly have the times changed, not only since the days of Madison - the days of the Constitution - but since the days even of Daniel Webster. Cold and dead as that great bad man was to the claims of humanity, he was not sufficiently removed from the better days of the Republic to claim, as Mr. Lincoln does, that the surrender of fugitive slaves is a plain requirement of the Constitution”) with his enthusiasm for the Second, which he called “a sacred effort.” See, April, in
    • Contrast Douglass's reaction to Lincoln's first inaugural (“How sadly have the times changed, not only since the days of Madison - the days of the Constitution - but since the days even of Daniel Webster. Cold and dead as that great bad man was to the claims of humanity, he was not sufficiently removed from the better days of the Republic to claim, as Mr. Lincoln does, that the surrender of fugitive slaves is a plain requirement of the Constitution”) with his enthusiasm for the Second, which he called “a sacred effort.” See Douglass, “The Inaugural Address” [April 1861], in
    • (1861) The Inaugural Address
    • Douglass1
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    • ed Philip S. Foner (New York: International Publishers, and his remarks on the Second Inaugural as reported in Reminisces of Abraham Lincoln by Distinguished Men of his Time, ed.
    • The Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass, ed Philip S. Foner (New York: International Publishers, 1950), III: 77–78; and his remarks on the Second Inaugural as reported in Reminisces of Abraham Lincoln by Distinguished Men of his Time, ed.
    • (1950) The Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass , vol.III , pp. 77-78
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    • New York: North American Review
    • Allen Thorndike Rice (New York: North American Review, 1888), 192–193.
    • (1888) Allen Thorndike Rice , pp. 192-193
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    • “The Blood of the Slave on the Skirts of the Northern People,” Life and Writings, I: 347; see also idem, “Lecture on Slavery, No. 2”, 8 December, Life and Writings, I: 141
    • “The Blood of the Slave on the Skirts of the Northern People,” Life and Writings, I: 347; see also idem, “Lecture on Slavery, No. 2” [Rochester, 8 December 1850], Life and Writings, I: 141.
    • (1850) Rochester
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    • [reprinted in The Liberator, 23 May, Life and Writings, II: 155
    • “Change of Opinion Announced” [reprinted in The Liberator, 23 May 1851], Life and Writings, II: 155.
    • (1851) Change of Opinion Announced
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    • [Rochester, 4 July, Life and Writings, II: 185
    • “The Fourth of July and the Negro” [Rochester, 4 July 1852], Life and Writings, II: 185.
    • (1852) The Fourth of July and the Negro
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    • [Himrods Corners, NY, 4 July, Life and Writings, III: 248
    • “The Slaveholders' Rebellion” [Himrods Corners, NY, 4 July 1862], Life and Writings, III: 248.
    • (1862) The Slaveholders' Rebellion
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    • See also
    • Life and Writings, 322–323. See also
    • Life and Writings , pp. 322-323
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    • Frederick Douglass and the American Apocalypse
    • David W. Blight, “Frederick Douglass and the American Apocalypse,” Civil War History 31 (1985): 309–328.
    • (1985) Civil War History , vol.31 , pp. 309-328
    • Blight, D.W.1
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    • Speech at Springfield, Illinois [26 June 1857]
    • “Speech at Springfield, Illinois [26 June 1857]”, Collected Works, II: 405–406.
    • Collected Works , vol.II , pp. 405-406
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    • “First Debate with Stephen A. Douglas at Ottawa, Illinois” [21 August 1858], Collected Works, III: 18. Douglass also argued that the founders expected the “speedy downfall of slavery”: see, [Church of the Puritans, NYC, May, Life and Writings, III: 354
    • “First Debate with Stephen A. Douglas at Ottawa, Illinois” [21 August 1858], Collected Works, III: 18. Douglass also argued that the founders expected the “speedy downfall of slavery”: see “The Present and Future of the Colored Race in America” [Church of the Puritans, NYC, May 1863], Life and Writings, III: 354.
    • (1863) The Present and Future of the Colored Race in America
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    • 27 February, Collected Works, III: 535. See also
    • “Address at Cooper Institute, New York City” [27 February 1860], Collected Works, III: 535. See also
    • (1860) Address at Cooper Institute, New York City
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    • 6 April, Collected Works, III: 376
    • “To Henry L. Pierce and others” [6 April 1859], Collected Works, III: 376.
    • (1859) To Henry L. Pierce and others
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    • 4 September, in Collected Works, III: 89
    • “Speech at Bloomington, Illinois” [4 September 1858], in Collected Works, III: 89.
    • (1858) Speech at Bloomington, Illinois
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    • 19 November, Collected Works, VII: 23
    • “Gettysburg Address” [19 November 1863], Collected Works, VII: 23.
    • (1863) Gettysburg Address
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    • The notable quotation in which Lincoln charged “Stephen, Franklin, Roger and James” with conspiring to nationalize slavery appears in Lincoln's 1854 Peoria speech; it reentered the political fray during the Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858; see
    • The notable quotation in which Lincoln charged “Stephen, Franklin, Roger and James” with conspiring to nationalize slavery appears in Lincoln's 1854 Peoria speech; it reentered the political fray during the Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858; see Lincoln, Collected Works, III: 20.
    • Collected Works , vol.III , pp. 20
    • Lincoln1
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    • speech, Chicago, Nov
    • “The Kansas-Nebraska Bill” [speech, Chicago, Nov 1854]
    • (1854) The Kansas-Nebraska Bill
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    • For the evolution of Douglass's political agendas at various points in his life, see Blight, Frederick Douglass' Civil War, passim
    • Life and Writings, II: 283. For the evolution of Douglass's political agendas at various points in his life, see Blight, Frederick Douglass' Civil War, passim.
    • Life and Writings , vol.II , pp. 283
  • 114
  • 116
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    • Collected Works, VIII: 399–405.
    • Collected Works , vol.VIII , pp. 399-405
  • 122
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    • Collected Works, IV: 235–236;
    • Collected Works , vol.IV , pp. 235-236
  • 123
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    • Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press
    • Noll, The Civil War as a Theological Crisis (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006), 89.
    • (2006) The Civil War as a Theological Crisis , pp. 89
    • Noll1
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    • 16 Aug
    • “Valedictory” [16 Aug 1863;
    • (1863) Valedictory
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    • emphasis added
    • Collected Writings, II: 115; emphasis added.
    • Collected Writings , vol.II , pp. 115
  • 133
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    • Liberalism and Its Communitarian Critics: Does Liberal Practice ‘Live Down’ to Liberal Theory?
    • For a similar argument directed particularly at Bellah and communitarians, see, ed. C.H. Reynolds and R.V. Norman (Berkeley: University of California Press
    • For a similar argument directed particularly at Bellah and communitarians, see Bernard Yack, “Liberalism and Its Communitarian Critics: Does Liberal Practice ‘Live Down’ to Liberal Theory?”, in Community in America: The Challenge of Habits of the Heart, ed. C.H. Reynolds and R.V. Norman (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988), 147–169.
    • (1988) Community in America: The Challenge of Habits of the Heart , pp. 147-169
    • Yack, B.1
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    • One thinks, here, of Rawls's invocation of the “fact of oppression” in, New York: Columbia University Press, A denial of the fact of oppression, I think, betrays either a fundamental misreading of the contemporary social landscape or a more dangerous willingness to impose uniformity on a diverse populace
    • One thinks, here, of Rawls's invocation of the “fact of oppression” in Political Liberalism (New York: Columbia University Press, 1993), 37. A denial of the fact of oppression, I think, betrays either a fundamental misreading of the contemporary social landscape or a more dangerous willingness to impose uniformity on a diverse populace.
    • (1993) Political Liberalism , pp. 37
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    • New York: Basic, For a fuller argument about the need for capacious, progressive jeremiads in contemporary American public life, see my A Prodigal People, ch. 8
    • Hollinger, Postethnic America: Beyond Multiculturalism (New York: Basic, 1995). For a fuller argument about the need for capacious, progressive jeremiads in contemporary American public life, see my A Prodigal People, ch. 8.
    • (1995) Postethnic America: Beyond Multiculturalism
    • Hollinger1


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