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British History - Religious Aspects, 19th Century British History - Victorian Era (1837-1901), Charity, Europe - Church History, General & Miscellaneous Protestantism
Pulling the Devil's Kingdom Down - The Salvation Army in Victorian Britain by Pamela J. Walker β€” book cover

Pulling the Devil's Kingdom Down - The Salvation Army in Victorian Britain

by Pamela J. Walker
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Overview

Those people in uniforms who ring bells and raise money for the poor during the holiday season belong to a religious movement that in 1865 combined early feminism, street preaching, holiness theology, and intentionally outrageous singing into what soon became the Salvation Army.
In Pulling the Devil's Kingdom Down, Pamela Walker emphasizes how thoroughly the Army entered into nineteenth-century urban life. She follows the movement from its Methodist roots and East London origins through its struggles with the established denominations of England, problems with the law and the media, and public manifestations that included street brawls with working-class toughs.
The Salvation Army was a neighborhood religion, with a "battle plan" especially suited to urban working-class geography and cultural life. The ability to use popular leisure activities as inspiration was a major factor in the Army's success, since pubs, music halls, sports, and betting were regarded as its principal rivals. Salvationist women claimed the "right to preach" and enjoyed spiritual authority and public visibility more extensively than in virtually any other religious or secular organization. Opposition to the new movement was equally energetic and took many forms, but even as contemporary music hall performers ridiculed the "Hallelujah Lasses," the Salvation Army was spreading across Great Britain and the Continent, and on to North America. The Army offered a distinctive response to the dilemmas facing Victorian Christians, in particular the relationship between what Salvationists believed and the work they did. Walker fills in the social, cultural, and religious contexts that make that relationship come to life.

About the Author, Pamela J. Walker

Pamela J. Walker is Associate Professor of History at Carleton University, Ottawa. She coedited Women Preachers and Prophets through Two Millennia of Christianity (with Beverly Mayne Kienzle, California, 1998).

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Editorials

History Today

The most comprehensive analysis so far.

Times Literary Supplement

A valuable and innovative study of the Army which also suggests directions for future research.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In this engaging study, Walker reminds readers of two basic facts: the Salvation Army's origins were British, and it was first and foremost an evangelical religious group, not a charity. Among the book's many accomplishments is setting the sectarian Army in a larger denominational framework; Walker shows that its bureaucratic structures and doctrines drew heavily from Methodism. Walker pays special attention to gender, noting, for example, that women's conversion stories differed from men's. Whereas Christian men often recounted the scarlet peccadilloes of their lives before conversion, "few women described such a sinful past." Finally Walker shows how Salvationists baptized secular working-class culture as Christian, borrowing lowbrow drinking tunes and putting religious lyrics to them. The book has a few flaws. For example, Walker insists that one of the reasons the Army is important is that it shows scholars that religion is not just what happens in church the Army, after all, happened in the streets. But this is something of a straw man, since few scholars of religion limit their vision to cathedrals. Also, although Walker no doubt started this book, which began as a Rutgers dissertation, before Diane Winston's book Red-Hot and Righteous so cogently profiled the Salvation Army in America, there are too many similarities between the two to call Walker's work truly pioneering or original. Still, it is an entertaining, informative and well-researched contribution to the study of religion in the Victorian era. (Apr.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
March 6, 2001
Publisher
University of California Press
Pages
350
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780520225916

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