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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Ann M. Woodall , Professor David ChalcraftPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9780754642039ISBN 10: 0754642038 Pages: 248 Publication Date: 28 June 2005 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"’What do Karl Marx and the Salvation Army’s William Booth have in common? More than one might expect, Ann Woodall suggests in this unusual book. They had similar encounters with the poorest of the poor in the greatest city of the nineteenth century - similar romantic hopes for their redemption - similar movements towards a more systematic programme of social transformation. Without turning Marx into a Salvationist or Booth into a socialist, Woodall shows how the ""residuum"" captured the imaginations of both religious and secular prophets of social change in the nineteenth century.’ Peter Mandler, Gonville and Caius College, University of Cambridge, UK ’The plight of the poor around the globe gives special relevance to this broadly informed and readable review of the engagement of Booth and Marx with the realities of intractable poverty among the residuum of Victorian London. As Woodall makes clear, Booth lived out a Gospel of redemptive compassion that produced a Salvation Army with the Cross at its heart. This informative study is an indispensable resource for recovering the historical and theological imperatives of the Army’s continuing pursuit of William Booth’s mission to the poor.’ General Paul A. Rader (Retired), Th.M., D.Miss, Former International Leader of The Salvation Army ’...Woodall’s book is a welcome addition to Salvationist historiography and Victorian social history.’ Ecclesiastical History ’...the intimate and systematic analysis of theology and ideology in [the] particular context of the London residuum adds a further level of understanding to the work of William Booth, the influence of Karl Marx, and responses to metropolitan poverty in the later Victorian period.’ The London Journal" 'What do Karl Marx and the Salvation Army's William Booth have in common? More than one might expect, Ann Woodall suggests in this unusual book. They had similar encounters with the poorest of the poor in the greatest city of the nineteenth century - similar romantic hopes for their redemption - similar movements towards a more systematic programme of social transformation. Without turning Marx into a Salvationist or Booth into a socialist, Woodall shows how the residuum captured the imaginations of both religious and secular prophets of social change in the nineteenth century.' Peter Mandler, Gonville and Caius College, University of Cambridge, UK 'The plight of the poor around the globe gives special relevance to this broadly informed and readable review of the engagement of Booth and Marx with the realities of intractable poverty among the residuum of Victorian London. As Woodall makes clear, Booth lived out a Gospel of redemptive compassion that produced a Salvation Army with the Cross at its heart. This informative study is an indispensable resource for recovering the historical and theological imperatives of the Army's continuing pursuit of William Booth's mission to the poor.' General Paul A. Rader (Retired), Th.M., D.Miss, Former International Leader of The Salvation Army '...Woodall's book is a welcome addition to Salvationist historiography and Victorian social history.' Ecclesiastical History '...the intimate and systematic analysis of theology and ideology in [the] particular context of the London residuum adds a further level of understanding to the work of William Booth, the influence of Karl Marx, and responses to metropolitan poverty in the later Victorian period.' The London Journal 'What do Karl Marx and the Salvation Army's William Booth have in common? More than one might expect, Ann Woodall suggests in this unusual book. They had similar encounters with the poorest of the poor in the greatest city of the nineteenth century - similar romantic hopes for their redemption - similar movements towards a more systematic programme of social transformation. Without turning Marx into a Salvationist or Booth into a socialist, Woodall shows how the residuum captured the imaginations of both religious and secular prophets of social change in the nineteenth century.' Peter Mandler, Gonville and Caius College, University of Cambridge, UK 'The plight of the poor around the globe gives special relevance to this broadly informed and readable review of the engagement of Booth and Marx with the realities of intractable poverty among the residuum of Victorian London. As Woodall makes clear, Booth lived out a Gospel of redemptive compassion that produced a Salvation Army with the Cross at its heart. This informative study is an indispensable resource for recovering the historical and theological imperatives of the Army's continuing pursuit of William Booth's mission to the poor.' General Paul A. Rader (Retired), Th.M., D.Miss, Former International Leader of The Salvation Army '...Woodall's book is a welcome addition to Salvationist historiography and Victorian social history.' Ecclesiastical History '...the intimate and systematic analysis of theology and ideology in [the] particular context of the London residuum adds a further level of understanding to the work of William Booth, the influence of Karl Marx, and responses to metropolitan poverty in the later Victorian period.' The London Journal Author InformationAnn M. Woodall is Chief International Auditor for the Salvation Army. She studied for her PhD at London Guildhall University, UK. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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