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Conservative Protestants in the New School Wars

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

James C. Carper
Affiliation:
University of South Carolina–Columbia
William J. Weston
Affiliation:
U.S. Department of Education–Office of Research

Abstract

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Type
Essay Review
Copyright
Copyright © 1990 by the History of Education Society 

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References

Notes

1 Smith, Timothy L.Protestant Schooling and American Nationality, 1800–1850,“ journal of American History 53 (Mar. 1967): 679–95; Tyack, David “The Kingdom of God and the Common School,” Harvard Educational Review (Fall 1966): 447–69; and Jorgenson, Lloyd The State and the Non-Public School, 1825–1925 (Columbia, Mo., 1987), 30–68.Google Scholar

2 Handy, Robert T. A Christian America: Protestant Hopes and Historical Realities (New York, 1971), 102.Google Scholar

3 Hunter, James Davison American Evangelicalism: Conservative Religion and the Quandary of Modernity (New Brunswick, N.J., 1983); Lynn, Robert W. Protestant Strategies in Education (New York, 1964); Lynn, Robert W. and Wright, Elliot The Big Little School: Two Hundred Years of the Sunday School, rev. ed. (Birmingham, Ala., 1980).Google Scholar

4 Curran, Francis X. The Churches and the Schools: American Protestantism and Popular Elementary Education (Chicago, 1954).Google Scholar

5 Kennedy, William B. The Shaping of Protestant Education (New York, 1966), 27.Google Scholar

6 On the tension in American civil religion between the Enlightenment and Puritan traditions, see Under, Robert D.Civil Religion in Historical Perspective: The Reality That Underlies the Concept,“ Journal of Church and State 17 (Autumn 1975): 412–18; Smith, Timothy L. “Righteousness and Hope: Christian Holiness and the Millennial Vision in America, 1800–1900,” American Quarterly 31 (Spring 1979): 21–45; and Reichley, A. James Religion in American Public Life (Washington, D.C., 1985), 1–114.Google Scholar

7 Hunter, American Evangelicalism, 37.Google Scholar

8 Reichley, Religion in American Public Life, 47. See also Neuhaus, Richard John The Naked Public Square: Religion and Democracy in America (Grand Rapids, Mich., 1984).Google Scholar

9 Pfeffer, LeoThe Triumph of Secular Humanism,“ Journal of Church and State 19 (Spring 1977): 211.Google Scholar

10 Neuhaus, Richard JohnWhat the Fundamentalists Want,“ Commentary 79 (May 1985): 45.Google Scholar

11 For a discussion of the Tennessee and Alabama textbook cases, see Glenn, Charles L.Religion, Textbooks, and the Common School,“ The Public Interest no. 88 (Summer 1987): 2847.Google Scholar

12 Hillocks, George Jr., “Books and Bombs: Ideological Conflict and the Schools—A Case Study of the Kanawha County Book Protest,” School Review 86 (Aug. 1978): 632–54.Google Scholar

13 Reid, Daniel G. Linder, Robert D. Shelley, Bruce L. and Stout, Harry S. eds. Dictionary of Christianity in America (Downers Grove, Ill., 1990), s.v. “Schools, Protestant Day,” by Carper, James C. See also Curran, The Churches and the Schools; Kraushaar, Otto F. Nonpublic Schools: Patterns of Diversity (Baltimore, 1972); Ognibene, Richard “Catholic and Protestant Education in the Late Nineteenth Century,” Religious Education 77 (Jan.–Feb. 1982): 5–20; and Sherrill, Lewis J. Presbyterian Parochial Schools, 1846–1870 (New Haven, Conn., 1932).Google Scholar

14 Carper, James C.The Christian Day School,“ in Religious Schooling in America, eds. Carper, James C. and Hunt, Thomas C. (Birmingham, Ala., 1984), 110–29.Google Scholar

15 See Hunt, Thomas C. Carper, James C. and Kniker, Charles R. eds., Religious Schools in America: A Selected Bibliography (New York, 1986), 163–83; and Bauch, Patricia A. ed., Private Education and the Public Interest: Research and Policy Issues (Westport, Conn., forthcoming).Google Scholar

16 Carper, James C. review of God's Choice: The Total World of a Fundamentalist Christian School, by Peshkin, Alan In Educational Studies 19 (Summer 1988): 223–28.Google Scholar

17 Carper, James C. review of Inside America's Christian Schools, by Parsons, Paul F. In Fides et Historia 21 (June 1989): 9293. See also Ammerman, Nancy T. Bible Believers: Fundamentalists in the Modern World (New Brunswick, N.J., 1987).Google Scholar