Scripture and Slaughter: The civil war as a theological and moral crisis: Lewis Perry

Modern Intellectual History 6 (1):207-221 (2009)
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Abstract

In a well-known 1964 essay on the “recovery” of American religious history, Henry F. May observed that some scholars had “revived” religious interpretations of the nation's greatest political crises, including the Civil War. But there was more work to be done. “A religious, or partly religious explanation of the Civil War,” May suggested, would “rest on two assertions: that serious and intractable moral conflicts were important in causing the war and that in nineteenth-century America such conflicts were particularly difficult to avoid or compromise because of the dominance of evangelical Protestantism in both sections.” In fact, both the importance of the moral conflict over slavery and the role of evangelicalism in intensifying hostilities were already attracting attention as historians reexamined previous emphases on economic factors and political bungling as explanations of a tragically unnecessary war.

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The Metaphysical Club: A Story of Ideas in America.Louis Menand - 2001 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 37 (4):635-638.
A moral case for the social relations of slavery.Mark A. Noll - 2007 - Modern Intellectual History 4 (1):191-204.

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