Christian Radicalism in the Church of England and the Invention of the British Sixties, 1957-1970 - Sam Brewitt-Taylor

Christian Radicalism in the Church of England and the Invention of the British Sixties, 1957-1970

The Hope of a World Transformed
Buch | Hardcover
288 Seiten
2018
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-882700-9 (ISBN)
117,20 inkl. MwSt
This study shows that Britain's 1960s moral revolution was importantly influenced by currents within British Christianity - not that the Sixties were a popular revolt against the churches, but that revolts against convention within the churches were highly significant in allowing Britain's 'secular revolution' to gain its own momentum.
This study provides the first postsecular account of the moral revolution that Britain experienced in the 1960s. Beginning from the groundbreaking premise that secularity is not a mere absence, but an invented culture, it argues that a new form of British secularity achieved cultural dominance during an abrupt cultural revolution which occurred in the late 1950s and early 1960s. This moral revolution had little to do with affluence or technology, but was most centrally a cultural response to the terrors of the Cold War, which pitted Christian Britain against the secular Soviet Union. By exploring contemporary prophecies of the inevitable arrival of 'the secular society', Sam Brewitt-Taylor shows that, ironically, British secularity was given decisive initial momentum by theologically radical Christians, who destigmatized the idea of 'modern secularity' and made it available for appropriation by a wide range of Sixties actors. Further than this, radical Christians played a significant contributory role in deciding what kind of secularity Britain's Sixties would adopt, by narrating Britain's moral revolution as globalist, individualist, anti-authoritarian, sexually libertarian, and politically egalitarian. In all these ways, radical Christians played a highly significant role in the early stages of Britain's Sixties.

Sam Brewitt-Taylor is Darby Fellow in Modern History at Lincoln College, Oxford, where he teaches British and European history since 1815, and researches moral change in mid-twentieth-century Britain. He studied at Oxford, where he gained BA (2007), MSt (2008), and DPhil degrees (2013). His first article, about the idea of 'secularization' in 1960s Britain, won the 2012 Duncan Tanner prize, awarded by Twentieth Century British History. An overview of his work is available from www.sambrewitt-taylor.com.

Introduction: Christian radicalism and the invented revolutions of the 1960s
1: World crisis and the making of Christian radicalism, c.1938-1957
2: Christian radicalism and the enactment of secular theology
3: Christian radicalism and the hope of Christian unity
4: Christian radicalism and the hope of transcending 'religion'
5: Christian radicalism and the hope of escaping human authority
6: Christian radicalism and the hope of a revolution of love
7: Christian radicalism and the hope of revolutionary social justice
Conclusion: Crisis, eschatology, and the re-invention of British modernity
Bibliography

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Oxford Historical Monographs
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 143 x 224 mm
Gewicht 452 g
Themenwelt Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Zeitgeschichte
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Kulturgeschichte
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Religionsgeschichte
ISBN-10 0-19-882700-8 / 0198827008
ISBN-13 978-0-19-882700-9 / 9780198827009
Zustand Neuware
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