Introduction; 1. The challenge of immediate emancipationism: the origins of abolitionist heresy, 1829–35; 2. Heresy and schism: the uneasy gradualist-proslavery ecclesiastical alliance, 1836–45; 3. The limits of Christian conservative antislavery: white supremacy and the failure of emancipationism, 1845–59; 4. The abolitionist threat: religious orthodoxy and proslavery unionism on the eve of civil war, 1859–61; 5. Competing visions of political theology: Kentucky Presbyterianism's civil war, 1861–2; 6. The end of neutrality: emancipation, political religion, and the triumph of abolitionist heterodoxy, 1862–5; 7. Kentucky's redemption: confederate religion and white democratic domination, 1865–74; Epilogue: the antebellum past for the postwar future.
This book places religious debates about slavery at the centre of American political culture before, during and after the Civil War.
Luke E. Harlow is Associate Professor of History at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. His published work has appeared in Slavery and Abolition, Ohio Valley History and the Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. He is the co-editor of Religion and American Politics: From the Colonial Period to the Present.
'Harlow makes a significant contribution to our developing
understanding of the unfortunate historical relationship between
evangelical Christianity, slavery, and race throughout America …
[A] masterful telling … Each assertion and point of analysis is
amply documented, and the end result is both refreshingly
source-based and absolutely convincing. In every way that matters,
Religion, Race, and the Making of Confederate Kentucky, 1830–1880
is a seamless monograph.' The American Historical Review
'Harlow's book joins a small but significant literature recasting
the relationship between Christianity and politics in the
nineteenth century. He masterfully shows how religion can be a
vital field of inquiry for unraveling the political peculiarities
of the era … Religion, Race, and the Making of Confederate
Kentucky, 1830–1880 is a very fine book, richly deserving a place
on the shelf of any student of the nineteenth-century South.'
Journal of Southern History
'… a welcome contribution …This persuasively argued and well
documented study focuses on an elite group of white men: Kentucky's
conservative evangelical clergy. […]Harlow's study answers recent
calls to integrate religion into political narratives, and it
exemplifies the valuable insights gained by doing so.' The Journal
of American History
'The legacies of slavery are still with us, and they include the
assumption that whiteness is somehow close to godliness. Works like
Harlow's … give us food for thought at a time when we need more
sustenance to keep fighting and hoping that God will make right,
for might has failed to do so.' The Christian Century
'… with uncommon skill, intelligence and sensitivity, [Harlow] has
deconstructed and re-centered the arguments of conservative
evangelicals to show that for all their differences both
antislavery gradualists and proslavery advocates worked from a
common theological foundation.' Journal of Southern Religion
'Writing in clear, crisp prose, and drawing upon a rich arsenal of
primary sources, including periodicals, archival materials and
primary texts, Harlow correctly notes that the commonwealth 'stood
at the center of the nineteenth-century American debate over race,
slavery and abolition'.' Ohio Valley History
'Luke Harlow has written an important and ultimately sobering book
on the relationship between religion, slavery and race in a vitally
important border state. By focusing on a number of key leaders, he
exposes both the nature and limits of antislavery sentiment in the
church and how the conservatism and timidity of religious leaders
led Kentucky along a path toward proslavery Unionism and ironically
greater identity with the Confederacy after the Civil War. A
first-rate monograph with considerable interpretative bite.' George
C. Rable, Charles Summersell Chair in Southern History, University
of Alabama, and author of God's Almost Chosen Peoples: A Religious
History of the American Civil War
'Highly original and deeply researched, Religion, Race, and the
Making of Confederate Kentucky, 1830–1880 reveals how this border
state was neither a moderate middle ground nor an outlier in the
nineteenth century, but rather was a key front in the nation's
long-standing battle over slavery. Harlow painstakingly
reconstructs a diverse array of arguments that vied for supremacy
along the pro- and antislavery spectrum - and reveals the crucial
position of evangelical religion at the root of it all. The result
is a masterful journey through the tangled history of race and
religion in nineteenth-century America.' Amy Murrell Taylor,
University of Kentucky
'Luke Harlow's powerful book shows how the political theologies of
slavery and white supremacy drove the Unionist state of Kentucky to
'become' Confederate after the Civil War. He ingeniously lays bare
the long and contentious transition from the view of slavery as a
'necessary evil' to a full-throated embrace of white supremacy
among white Kentucky Protestants, carefully demonstrating exactly
how the faith that sustained slavery long outlived emancipation.'
Beth Barton Schweiger, University of Arkansas
'Luke Harlow's carefully researched and gracefully argued book
reveals the importance of religion - an often-overlooked subject -
in the racial politics of the Civil War era. Religion, as Harlow
shows, explains Kentucky's transformation from a state that favored
the Union to one identified with the Confederacy and white
supremacy after the Civil War. Harlow's analysis, however, is about
more than Kentucky. In his skilled hands, the state exposes broad
national dynamics that explain the limits of change during
Reconstruction more generally.' Laura F. Edwards, Duke University,
North Carolina
'Harlow's book adds to a wealth of careful studies of the
relationship between nineteenth-century evangelicalism and slavery.
It is a significant virtue of [this book] that he persists with his
narrative beyond the war's end into the Reconstruction years.'
Patheos (patheos.com)
'[I] have no doubt that [this] will make a big splash in a number
of fields, including religious history, the history of the Civil
War and Reconstruction, and southern history broadly construed.'
Religion in American History (usreligion.blogspot.co.uk)
'By delving into the religious roots of both proslavery and
antislavery adherents, Harlow reveals how the two opposite sides
were united in racist theology by the post-war period … Harlow's
work is a welcome addition to Kentucky history, religious history,
and the literature on the issues of race and slavery in the
nineteenth century.' Civil War Book Review
'Luke Harlow's Religion, Race, and the Making of Confederate
Kentucky, 1830–1880 has taken a story that specialists have come to
know - that white Kentuckians came late to their embrace of
Confederate culture, after the failure of that political state -
and has used it to reveal connections between evangelical
religious, racial, and political thought in nineteenth-century
America on both sides of the Civil War that have never before been
explored so deeply … a signal contribution to the field … Harlow
provides a needed postscript to the stories of evangelical conflict
over slavery, demonstrating how ideas from the antebellum period
are carried over into the postbellum one. Harlow is able to see
this genealogy both because he is exquisitely attuned to the
theological repartee of his subjects and because he takes on a
distinct temporal frame, tracing connections and changes between
antebellum and postbellum belief systems in a way that many other
historians looking at the intersection of
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