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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Lincoln A. MullenPublisher: Harvard University Press Imprint: Harvard University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.10cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.696kg ISBN: 9780674975620ISBN 10: 0674975626 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 28 August 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsAmericans switch religions more frequently than people from just about any other nation. Mullen connects this phenomenon with the distinctively, though not uniquely, American idea that religion is a choice rather than an inheritance...This well-written and innovative work will be enjoyed by students of American religious history and those interested in investigating the deeper historical roots of contemporary American spirituality.-- (11/01/2017) Marvelous...Recognizing that all conversions contain losses and gains, Mullen approaches his topic with both intellectual depth and nuance and with empathy for the struggles, losses, and victories of the millions of people who took new paths in their spiritual and religious lives in 19th-century America.--Reading Religion (05/03/2018) Offers an exciting topic, provocative set of questions, and a trove of intriguing vignettes. It is one of the most thought-provoking books I have read in a long time.-- (01/09/2018) Looking at American religious history through the lens of conversion brings forth many interesting tales of 19th-century subjects grappling with changing landscapes of religion and philosophical thought.--Choice (03/01/2018) This freshly synthetic work shows how religious choice developed as the backbone of American religious life...An important book and a pleasure to read.--Church History (06/01/2018) Quite successful...in illustrating the varieties of religious experience in nineteenth-century America and in conveying some of the meanings they held for the converts.--American Historical Review (04/01/2018) Engagingly written...[Mullen] historicizes an important aspect of the complicated but infinitely fascinating democratization of American religion.--American Nineteenth Century History (05/15/2018) The Chance of Salvation deftly captures the chaotic nature of American religion in the 19th century...Mullen helps us see how a distinctly evangelical approach to salvation had ripple effects beyond evangelicals, and he should be commended for it.--Josh McMullen Christianity Today (11/01/2017) Americans switch religions more frequently than people from just about any other nation. Mullen connects this phenomenon with the distinctively, though not uniquely, American idea that religion is a choice rather than an inheritance...This well-written and innovative work will be enjoyed by students of American religious history and those interested in investigating the deeper historical roots of contemporary American spirituality.--Brian Sullivan Library Journal (11/01/2017) The Chance of Salvation deftly captures the chaotic nature of American religion in the 19th century...Mullen helps us see how a distinctly evangelical approach to salvation had ripple effects beyond evangelicals, and he should be commended for it.--Josh McMullen Christianity Today (11/01/2017) Americans switch religions more frequently than people from just about any other nation. Mullen connects this phenomenon with the distinctively, though not uniquely, American idea that religion is a choice rather than an inheritance...This well-written and innovative work will be enjoyed by students of American religious history and those interested in investigating the deeper historical roots of contemporary American spirituality.-- (11/01/2017) Engagingly written...[Mullen] historicizes an important aspect of the complicated but infinitely fascinating democratization of American religion.--American Nineteenth Century History (05/15/2018) Looking at American religious history through the lens of conversion brings forth many interesting tales of 19th-century subjects grappling with changing landscapes of religion and philosophical thought.--Choice (03/01/2018) Marvelous...Recognizing that all conversions contain losses and gains, Mullen approaches his topic with both intellectual depth and nuance and with empathy for the struggles, losses, and victories of the millions of people who took new paths in their spiritual and religious lives in 19th-century America.--Reading Religion (05/03/2018) Offers an exciting topic, provocative set of questions, and a trove of intriguing vignettes. It is one of the most thought-provoking books I have read in a long time.-- (01/09/2018) Quite successful...in illustrating the varieties of religious experience in nineteenth-century America and in conveying some of the meanings they held for the converts.--American Historical Review (04/01/2018) This freshly synthetic work shows how religious choice developed as the backbone of American religious life...An important book and a pleasure to read.--Church History (06/01/2018) The Chance of Salvation deftly captures the chaotic nature of American religion in the 19th century...Mullen helps us see how a distinctly evangelical approach to salvation had ripple effects beyond evangelicals, and he should be commended for it.--Josh McMullen Christianity Today (11/01/2017) Author InformationLincoln A. Mullen is Assistant Professor of History and Art History at George Mason University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |