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Looking for God in the Suburbs James Hudnut-Beumler

Looking for God in the Suburbs By James Hudnut-Beumler

Looking for God in the Suburbs by James Hudnut-Beumler


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Summary

In the 1950s, 99% of adult Americans said they believed in God. How did this consensus turn into the confrontational debates over religion in the 1960s? James Hudnut-Beumler argues that post-World War II suburban conformity made church-going so much a part of middle-class values and life that religion and culture became virtually synonymous.

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Looking for God in the Suburbs Summary

Looking for God in the Suburbs: The Religion of the American Dream and its Critics, 1945-1965 by James Hudnut-Beumler

In the 1950s, 99 percent of adult Americans said they believed in God. How, James Hudnut-Beumler asks, did this consensus about religion turn into the confrontational debates over religion in the 1960s? He argues that post-World War II suburban conformity made church-going so much a part of middle-class values and life that religion and culture became virtually synonymous. Secular critics like David Riesman, William Whyte, C. Wright Mills, and Dwight Macdonald, who blamed American culture for its conformism and lack of class consciousness, and religious critics like Will Herberg, Gibson Winter, and Peter Berger, who argued that religion had lost its true roots by incorporating only the middle class, converged in their attacks on popular religion.

Although most Americans continued to live and worship as before, a significant number of young people followed the critics' call for a faith that led to social action, but they turned away from organized religion and toward the counterculture of the sixties. The critics of the 1950s deserve credit for asking questions about the value of religion as it was being practiced and the responsibilities of the affluent to the poor-and for putting these issues on the social and cultural agenda of the next generation.

About James Hudnut-Beumler

James Hudnut-Beumler is the Anne Potter Wilson Distinguished Professor of American Religious History at Vanderbilt University and dean of the Divinity School. Prior to coming to Vanderbilt in 2000, he was dean of the faculty at Columbia Theological Seminary, a program associate for Lilly Endowment, and director of the undergraduate program in Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. Dr. Hudnut-Beumler is the author of Looking for God in the Suburbs: The Religion of the American Dream and Its Critics,1945-1965 (Rutgers, 1994) and Generous Saints: Congregations Rethinking Money and Ethics (Alban, 1999), and is co-author of The History of the Riverside Church in the City of New York (NYU, 2005). Most recently he completed an economic history of American Protestantism from 1750 to the present, entitled, In Pursuit of the Almighty's Dollar: A History of Money and American Protestantism (University of North Carolina, 2007).

Table of Contents

Preface
1. Life in a Suburban Culture
2. The Return to Religion
3. Critics of the American Dream
4. Critics of the American Way of Religion
5. Among the Ruins of Certainty: Religion in the Sixties
Notes
Index
About the Author

Additional information

CIN0813520843G
9780813520841
0813520843
Looking for God in the Suburbs: The Religion of the American Dream and its Critics, 1945-1965 by James Hudnut-Beumler
Used - Good
Paperback
Rutgers University Press
1994-09-01
248
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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