Identifying the Image of God: Radical Christians and Nonviolent Power in the Antebellum United StatesOxford University Press, 2002 M11 14 - 304 páginas Between 1820 and 1860, American social reformers invited all people to identify God's image in the victims of war, slavery, and addiction. Identifying the Image of God traces the theme of identification--and its liberal Christian roots--through the literature of social reform, focusing on sentimental novels, temperance tales, and slave narratives, and invites contemporary activists to revive the "politics of identification." |
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Página 27
... Hope Leslie , Sedgwick told of an Indian chief who is naturally given to the " human virtues " but succumbs to the passion of vengeance when his oldest son is killed and his other children are kid- napped by the whites . His temporary ...
... Hope Leslie , Sedgwick told of an Indian chief who is naturally given to the " human virtues " but succumbs to the passion of vengeance when his oldest son is killed and his other children are kid- napped by the whites . His temporary ...
Página 32
... hope , that gave to his countenance an expression of angelic goodness . " 69 Liberal novels are also filled with angelic mothers whose orphaned children pray as often to them as to God . When Sedgwick's Hope Leslie is in trouble , she ...
... hope , that gave to his countenance an expression of angelic goodness . " 69 Liberal novels are also filled with angelic mothers whose orphaned children pray as often to them as to God . When Sedgwick's Hope Leslie is in trouble , she ...
Página 33
... Hope Leslie , chides his wife when she says that an unconverted Pequod woman had died " in her sins . " " We should not suit God's mercy , " he says , " to the narrow frame of our thoughts . " Then , as a good Puritan , he cites a ...
... Hope Leslie , chides his wife when she says that an unconverted Pequod woman had died " in her sins . " " We should not suit God's mercy , " he says , " to the narrow frame of our thoughts . " Then , as a good Puritan , he cites a ...
Página 36
... Hope Leslie , is thus inevitable . It not only fulfills William Fletcher's sentimental dream but also has great reconciliatory potential : Hope's implicit religious liberalism balances Everell's Puritan- ism , while his strong ...
... Hope Leslie , is thus inevitable . It not only fulfills William Fletcher's sentimental dream but also has great reconciliatory potential : Hope's implicit religious liberalism balances Everell's Puritan- ism , while his strong ...
Página 37
... Hope Leslie , his conflict with her was rooted not in necessity but in his own theologically con- fused distrust of her natural affections . He faced " superfluous trials " because of his belief that " whatever gratified the natural ...
... Hope Leslie , his conflict with her was rooted not in necessity but in his own theologically con- fused distrust of her natural affections . He faced " superfluous trials " because of his belief that " whatever gratified the natural ...
Contenido
11 | |
From Sentimentality to Social Reform The Emergence of Radical Christian Liberalism | 46 |
The Gospel the Declaration and the Divine Child Theology and Literature of Ultra Reform | 66 |
Looking for Victims Violence and Theology in Temperance Narratives | 102 |
Through the BloodStained Gate Violence Birth and the Imago Dei in Fugitive Slave Narratives | 127 |
Epics of Ambivalence Nonviolent Power in Harriet Beecher Stowes Antislavery Novels | 157 |
Violent Messiahs Radical Christian Liberals and the Civil War | 174 |
Liberal Irony | 215 |
Notes | 219 |
Bibliography | 257 |
Index | 281 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Identifying the Image of God: Radical Christians and Nonviolent Power in the ... Dan McKanan Vista previa limitada - 2002 |
Identifying the Image of God: Radical Christians and Nonviolent Power in the ... Dan McKanan Vista previa limitada - 2002 |
Identifying the Image of God: Radical Christians and Nonviolent Power in the ... Dan McKanan Vista previa limitada - 2002 |
Términos y frases comunes
abolition Abolitionism abolitionist activists alcohol ambivalence American angel antebellum antislavery apocalyptic appeal Beecher believed benevolent Bible Catharine Sedgwick Channing character Christ church claimed committed death Declaration demonic divine doctrine Dred drunkards England enslavement evil experience father fiction Frederick Douglass freedom fugitive slave narrative Garrison and Garrison Garrisonian God's gospel heart heaven Henry Clarke Wright Hope Leslie Ibid imago imago dei Indians individual insisted institutions intemperance Jesus John Brown Lewis Tappan liberal theology Lydia Maria Child moral mother movement narrators nation New-England Tale nonresistance nonviolent nonviolent power novel orthodox peace political principles providential Puritan Quaker radical Christian liberalism radical liberal readers religion religious Revolution revolutionary Sedgwick sense Sigourney slaveholders slavery social reform society soul speech spirit story Stowe Stowe's suffering suggested temperance writers theology tion tradition ultimately ultraists Uncle Tom's Cabin Unitarian victims violence vision voice Washingtonian William Lloyd Garrison wrote