Amy Kittelstrom is a scholar of modern thought and culture who lives and works in the North Bay Area of California. She currently serves on the editorial board of the Journal of American History and is an associate professor at Sonoma State University. Her research has been supported by fellowships from the Center for Religion and American Life at Yale, the Charles Warren Center for the Study of American History at Harvard, and the Center for the Study of Religion at Princeton. Her next book will put the twentieth-century writer James Baldwin in deep historical context.
Christian Century:
“The Religion of Democracy is an extremely well-researched and
interesting description of the sustaining arguments and tenets of
the American Reformation, as well as an informative portrayal of
the complex lives of some of its central figures.”
The San Francisco Chronicle:
“Historian Kittelstrom brilliantly presents the historic
relationship between Christianity and social progress in American
history.”
Publishers Weekly (starred review):
“Kittelstrom’s history stands out for its deeply textured treatment
of each of these profoundly important thinkers, permitting
appreciation of the influences that brought them to an enlightened
view of faith and its sociopolitical implications. This timely,
important work by an excellent scholar is part of the Penguin
History of American Life series.”
Booklist:
“Historian Kittelstrom examines the lives and the writings of seven
prominent American liberals and suggests that today’s pluralistic
political liberalism is a direct descendant of the religious
liberalism that emerged in, and transformed, the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries… The result is a lively and erudite reminder
of pluralism’s deep roots in American soil, and religion’s role in
putting them there.”
Library Journal (starred review):
“Kittelstrom explores the private and intellectual lives of each
individual and provides new insights into the cultural history of
liberalism… Readers will appreciate the skillful weaving of primary
sources into a compelling chronicle of an idea told through
individual experiences.”
CHOICE Magazine:
"This book challenges contemporary conversations that conflate
secularism and liberalism and expands the scholarly understanding
of liberalism in the US. Highly recommended."
Jill Lepore, author of Book of Ages and The Secret
History of Wonder Woman:
“The Religion of Democracy is a stunning history of the opening of
the American mind. Through a shrewd study of seven subtle thinkers,
Kittelstrom explores the place of belief, faith, and virtue in the
intellectual traditions that lie behind American liberalism. A
fascinating, important, and resonant book.”
Daniel Walker Howe, Pulitzer Prize-winning author
of What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America,
1815-1848:
“Amy Kittelstrom here pours new life into intellectual history for
scholars and concerned citizens, whether they are religious or not.
She traces the commitments of present-day civic liberalism—free
inquiry, cultural pluralism, public education, and compassion for
the disadvantaged—not to the rise of secularism but to the
Christian theological liberalism of New England at the time of the
American Revolution. She finds these origins in what she terms,
appropriately, an American Reformation.”
David D. Hall, Harvard University; author of A Reforming
People:
“Turning the pages of this remarkable book, I found myself moved
not only by its intellectual range and the lucidity of
Kittelstrom’s prose but also by its central theme, the emergence in
nineteenth-century America of an ethical commitment to democracy’s
highest moral and practical possibilities—in effect, a ‘religion of
democracy.’ An illuminating story, for our times as well as for
what it tells us about the past.”
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