The Soul of the American University: From Protestant Establishment to Established Nonbelief

Предна корица
Oxford University Press, 1994 - 462 страници
Only a century ago, almost all state universities held compulsory chapel services, and some required Sunday church attendance as well. In fact, state-sponsored chapel services were commonplace until the World War II era, and as late as the 1950s, it was not unusual for leading schools to refer to themselves as "Christian" institutions. Today, the once pervasive influence of religion in the intellectual and cultural life of America's preeminent colleges and universities has all but vanished. In The Soul of the American University, Marsden explores how, and why, these dramatic changes occurred.
Far from a lament for a lost golden age when mainline Protestants ruled American education, The Soul of the American University offers a penetrating critique of that era, surveying the role of Protestantism in higher education from the founding of Harvard in the 1630s through the collapse of the WASP establishment in the 1960s. Marsden tells the stories of many of our pace-setting universities at defining moments in their histories, including Harvard, Yale, Princeton, the University of Michigan, Johns Hopkins, the University of California at Berkeley, and the University of Chicago. He recreates the religious feuds that accompanied Yale's transition from a flagship evangelical college to a university, and the dramatic debate over the place of religion in higher education between Harvard's President Charles Eliot and Princeton's President James McCosh. Marsden's analysis ranges from debates over Darwinism and higher critics of the Bible, to the roles of government and wealthy contributors, the impact of changing student mores, and even the religious functions of college football. He argues persuasively that the values of "liberalism" and "tolerance" that the establishment championed and used to marginalize Christian fundamentalism and Roman Catholicism eventually and perhaps inevitably led to its own disappearance from the educational milieu, as nonsectarian came to mean exclusively secular.
While the largely voluntary disestablishment of religion may appear in many respects commendable, Marsden believes that it has nonetheless led to the infringement of the free exercise of religion in most of academic life. In effect, nonbelief has been established as the only valid academic perspective. In a provocative final chapter, Marsden spells out his own prescription for change, arguing that just as the academy has made room for feminist and multicultural perspectives, so should there be room once again for traditional religious viewpoints. A thoughtful blend of historical narrative and searching analysis, The Soul of the American University exemplifies what it advocates: that religious perspectives can provide a legitimate contribution to the highest level of scholarship.
 

Избрани страници

Съдържание

Introduction
3
God and Buckley at Yale 1951
10
Henry Sloane Coffins Yale 1897
17
The Establishment of Protestant
29
The New Queen of the Sciences and the New Republic
48
Two Kinds of Sectarianism
68
A Righteous Consensus Whig Style
79
Defining the American University
97
Making the World Safe from the Traditionalist Establishment
219
The LowChurch Idea of a University
236
When the Tie No Longer Binds
263
The Trouble with the OldTime Religion
267
The Elusive Ideal of Academic Freedom
292
The Fundamentalist Menace
317
The Obstacles to a Christian Presence
332
Outsiders
357

The Christian Legacy in the Epoch of Science
113
Positive Christianity versus Positivism at Noah Porters Yale
123
Revolution without Much Ideology
134
Methodological Secularization and Its Christian Rationale
150
New England Intentions with
167
Harvard and the Religion of Humanity
181
Holding the Line at Princeton
196
Searching for a Soul
369
A Church with the Soul of a Nation
388
Liberal Protestantism without Protestantism
408
Concluding Unscientific Postscript
429
Index
445
Авторско право

Други издания - Преглед на всички

Често срещани думи и фрази

Информация за автора (1994)

George M. Marsden is Francis A. McAnaney Professor of History at the University of Notre Dame. His many books include Fundamentalism and American Culture, The Secularization of the Academy (edited with Bradley J. Longfield), and Understanding Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism.

Библиография