Participation & Pluralism in Democracies, Christianity - General & Miscellaneous, Fraternal Orders - Freemasonry, United States History - General & Miscellaneous, Political Parties - United States
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Overview
In the wake of the American and French Revolutions, the Order of the Masons gained popularity in Europe and America. A cosmopolitan and tolerant Order, reflecting in many ways the best aspects of the Enlightenment, the Masons were also a secret and exclusive society, open only to men and made up of members from the middle-class and upper-class strata of small towns. When former Mason William Morgan disappeared in western New York in 1826 after threatening to publish an exposΓ© on Freemasonry, opposition to the group mounted, eventually leading to the formation of the Antimasonry Party. Accusing the Masons of undemocratic practices that endangered fundamental civic and religious rights, the Antimasons soon became a force in state and national politics. Paul Goodman's magisterial study is a sweeping reinterpretation of the ideology, class formation, religious tension, and gender conflict in early 19th-century America. A book of vast learning and great power, Towards a Christian Republic is certain to attract wide attention.
Book Details
Published
June 2, 1988
Publisher
New York : Oxford University Press, 1988.
Pages
344
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780195048643