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The Making of Working-Class Religion

By: (Author) Matthew Pehl

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Ksh 15,850.00

Format: Hardback or Cased Book

ISBN-10: 0252040422

ISBN-13: 9780252040429

Series: Working Class in American History

Publisher: University of Illinois Press

Imprint: University of Illinois Press

Country of Manufacture: US

Country of Publication: GB

Publication Date: Sep 8th, 2016

Print length: 264 Pages

Weight: 528 grams

Dimensions (height x width x thickness): 16.20 x 25.90 x 2.10 cms

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Religion has played a protean role in the lives of America's workers. In this innovative volume, Matthew Pehl focuses on Detroit to examine the religious consciousness constructed by the city's working-class Catholics, African American Protestants, and southern-born white evangelicals and Pentecostals between 1910 and 1969. Pehl embarks on an integrative view of working-class faith that ranges across boundaries of class, race, denomination, and time. As he shows, workers in the 1910s and 1920s practiced beliefs characterized by emotional expressiveness, alliance with supernatural forces, and incorporation of mass culture's secular diversions into the sacred. That gave way to the more pragmatic class-conscious religion cultures of the New Deal era and, from the late Thirties on, a quilt of secular working-class cultures that coexisted in competitive, though creative, tension. Finally, Pehl shows how the ideology of race eclipsed class in the 1950s and 1960s, and in so doing replaced the class-conscious with the race-conscious in religious cultures throughout the city. An ambitiously inclusive contribution to a burgeoning field, The Making of Working-Class Religion breaks new ground in the study of solidarity and the sacred in the American heartland.

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