Culture and Redemption: Religion, the Secular, and American Literature

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Princeton University Press, 2007 - 337 páginas

Many Americans wish to believe that the United States, founded in religious tolerance, has gradually and naturally established a secular public sphere that is equally tolerant of all religions--or none. Culture and Redemption suggests otherwise. Tracy Fessenden contends that the uneven separation of church and state in America, far from safeguarding an arena for democratic flourishing, has functioned instead to promote particular forms of religious possibility while containing, suppressing, or excluding others. At a moment when questions about the appropriate role of religion in public life have become trenchant as never before, Culture and Redemption radically challenges conventional depictions--celebratory or damning--of America's "secular" public sphere.


Examining American legal cases, children's books, sermons, and polemics together with popular and classic works of literature from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries, Culture and Redemption shows how the vaunted secularization of American culture proceeds not as an inevitable by-product of modernity, but instead through concerted attempts to render dominant forms of Protestant identity continuous with democratic, civil identity. Fessenden shows this process to be thoroughly implicated, moreover, in practices of often-violent exclusion that go to the making of national culture: Indian removals, forced acculturations of religious and other minorities, internal and external colonizations, and exacting constructions of sex and gender. Her new readings of Emerson, Whitman, Melville, Stowe, Twain, Gilman, Fitzgerald, and others who address themselves to these dynamics in intricate and often unexpected ways advance a major reinterpretation of American writing.

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Índice

Legible Diminion Puritanisms New World Narrative
15
Protestant Expansion Indian Violence and Childhood Death The New England Primer
34
From Disestablishment to Consensus The NineteenthCentury Bible Wars and the Limits of Dissent
60
Conversion to Democracy Religion and the American Renaissance
84
Secular Fictions
109
From Romanism to Race Uncle Toms Cabin
111
Mark Twain and the Ambivalent Refuge of Unbelief
137
Secularism Feminism Imperialism Charlotte Perkins Gilman and the Progress Narrative of US Feminism
161
F Scott Fitzgeralds Catholic Closet
181
American Religion and the Future of Dissent
213
Notes
219
Bibliography
289
Index
323
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Tracy Fessenden is Associate Professor of Religious Studies and Women's and Gender Studies at Arizona State University. She is the coeditor of The Puritan Origins of American Sex: Religion, Sexuality, and National Identity in American Literature.

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