Paul Harvey
Is there anything more dreaded, or derided, in American religious studies than "denominational history." At one time, probably not, since such studies tended to the antiquarian or the hagiographical. In recent years that has changed; and while it still does not count as "hip," it is simply a fact that denominations remain the major institutional expression of American Christianity, at least, and arguably of other religious expressions as well.
American Denominational History: Perspectives on the Past, Prospects for the Future, edited by Keith Harper (University of Alabama Press, 2008), is a new essay collection that surveys the field and projects possibilities for study in the future. It should be of particular help to graduate students and others seeking contemporary scholarly overviews and historiographical syntheses. Here's the table of contents:
Introduction, by Keith Harper
Catholic Distinctiveness and the Challenge of American Denominationalism by Amy Koehlinger
New Directions on the Congregational Way by Margaret Bendroth
Presbyterians in America: Denominational History and the Quest for Identity by Sean Michael Lucas (you can read this essay here)
From the Margin to the Middle to Somewhere In Between: An Overview of American Baptist Historiography by Keith Harper
"Everything Arose Just as the Occasion Offered": Defining Methodist Identity through the History of Methodist Polity by Jennifer L. Woodruff Tait
Black Protestantism: A Historiographical Appraisal by Paul Harvey
Mormon Historiography by David J. Whittaker
Interpreting American Pentecostal Origins: Retrospect and Prospect by Randall J. Stephens
"We're All Evangelicals Now": The Existential and Backward Historiography of Twentieth-Century Evangelicalism by Barry Hankins
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