Protestantism and Protestantization

Protestantism and Protestantization are key concepts in the GOBA project. The list below presents some of the major publications on these concepts.

Destruction of icons in Zurich, 1524. Image: Wikimedia Commons.

Berger, Peter. 2007. “Pluralism, Protestantization, and the Voluntary Principle.” In Democracy and the New Religious Pluralism, edited by Thomas Banchoff, 20–29. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Clark, Lynn Schofield. 2002. “The ‘Protestantization’ of Research into Media, Religion, and Culture.” In Practicing Religion in the Media Age. Explorations in Media, Religion, and Culture, edited by Stewart M. Hoover and Lynn Schofield Clark, 7–37. New York: Columbia University Press.

Fenton, Elizabeth. 2006. “Birth of a Protestant Nation: Catholic Canadians, Religious Pluralism, and National Unity in the Early U.S. Republic.” Early American Literature 41 (1): 29–57.

Franchot, Jenny. 1994. Roads to Rome. The Antebellum Protestant Encounter with Caholicism. Oxford: University of California Press.[download]

Keane, Webb. 2002. “Sincerity, ‘Modernity,’ and the Protestants.” Cultural Anthropology 17 (1): 65–92 [download]

Pickering, W.S.F. 1985. “Protestantism and Power : Some Sociological Observations.” Social Compass 32: 163–74.

Schmalzbauer, John. 2005. “Searching for Protestantism in the Encyclopedia of Protestantism.” Religion 35: 247–65.

Sussman, Lance J. 1986. “Isaac Leeser and the Protestantization of American Judaism.” American Jewish Archives Journal 38 (1): 1–21.

Woodberry, Robert Dudley, and Timothy S. Shah. 2004. “The Pioneering Protestants.” Journal of Democracy 15 (2): 47–61.

 

Published June 26, 2015 11:36 AM - Last modified May 12, 2016 2:57 PM