Title
Recovering the Margins of American Religious History: The Legacy of David Edwin Harrell Jr. (Religion and American Culture),Used
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Recovering the Margins of American Religious History, a celebration of the life and work of David Edwin Harrell Jr., brings together essays from Harrells colleagues, peers, and students that explore his impact and legacy in the field of American religious studies. Raised in an upperclass family in midtwentiethcentury Jacksonville, Florida, Harrells membership in the Church of Christ helped establish his sense of self as a spiritual outsider. This early exclusion from the Christian mainstream laid a foundation for Harrells pioneering studies of marginalized faiths, including the first stirrings of neofundamentalism and the diminishingly influential social gospel movement.Harrells connections with these religious movements point to his deeper ongoing concerns with class, gender, and race as core factors behind religious institutions, and he has unblinkingly investigated a wide range of social dynamics. Combining an extensive knowledge of and longstanding passion for American religious history with a comprehensive understanding of the developing world, Harrells research and writings over his lifetime have produced compelling portraits of the American religious underclass, an increased integration of religion into the narrative of world history, and innovative new comparative studies in the healing and charismatic movements of the developing world.ContributorsScott C. Billingsley / Wayne Flynt / James R. Goff Jr. / John C. Hardin / Samuel S. Hill / Richard T. Hughes / Beth Barton Schweiger / Grant Wacker / B. Dwain Waldrep / Charles Reagan Wilson
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