American Creed: Philanthropy and the Rise of Civil Society, 1700-1865University of Chicago Press, 15/04/2011 - 330 من الصفحات Since the dawn of the republic, faith in social equality, religious freedom, and the right to engage in civic activism have constituted our national creed. In this bracing history, Kathleen D. McCarthy traces the evolution of these ideals, exploring the impact of philanthropy and volunteerism on America from 1700 to 1865. What results is a vital reevaluation of public life during the pivotal decades leading up to the Civil War. The market revolution, participatory democracy, and voluntary associations have all been closely linked since the birth of the United States. American Creed explores the relationships among these three institutions, showing how charities and reform associations forged partnerships with government, provided important safety valves for popular discontent, and sparked much-needed economic development. McCarthy also demonstrates how the idea of philanthropy became crucially wedded to social activism during the Jacksonian era. She explores how acts of volunteerism and charity became involved with the abolitionist movement, educational patronage, the struggle against racism, and female social justice campaigns. What resulted, she contends, were heated political battles over the extent to which women and African Americans would occupy the public stage. Tracing, then, the evolution of civil society and the pivotal role of philanthropy in the search for and exercise of political and economic power, this book will prove essential to anyone interested in American history and government. |
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الصفحة 14
... England, and a few fledgling ventures had been introduced into the colonies by innovative clerics like Boston's Cotton Mather.2 At first glance, Franklin seemed an unlikely philanthropist. Unlike the aristocratic Jefferson, he was born ...
... England, and a few fledgling ventures had been introduced into the colonies by innovative clerics like Boston's Cotton Mather.2 At first glance, Franklin seemed an unlikely philanthropist. Unlike the aristocratic Jefferson, he was born ...
الصفحة 15
... England, Franklin fastened on his ideas, secularized them, and made them his own. To quote one of his many biographers, he transformed the notion of associated public service into “a kind of religion.” As he later admitted, Essay upon ...
... England, Franklin fastened on his ideas, secularized them, and made them his own. To quote one of his many biographers, he transformed the notion of associated public service into “a kind of religion.” As he later admitted, Essay upon ...
الصفحة 19
... England were coupled with “considerable” grants of land from the Pennsylvania Assembly. Public support for colleges and universities had ample colonial precedents. Harvard received both public and private funding beginning in the ...
... England were coupled with “considerable” grants of land from the Pennsylvania Assembly. Public support for colleges and universities had ample colonial precedents. Harvard received both public and private funding beginning in the ...
الصفحة 20
... England, where businesses were barred from receiving charters for a century between the passage of the Bubble Act of and its repeal in . During the interim, charters were granted for one purpose: to create “agencies of ...
... England, where businesses were barred from receiving charters for a century between the passage of the Bubble Act of and its repeal in . During the interim, charters were granted for one purpose: to create “agencies of ...
الصفحة 22
... England and across the breadth of the colonies to underwrite his revivals. His efforts capitalized on the surge of consumerism that swept both sides of the Atlantic in the eighteenth century. To quote his biographer, Whitefield used ...
... England and across the breadth of the colonies to underwrite his revivals. His efforts capitalized on the surge of consumerism that swept both sides of the Atlantic in the eighteenth century. To quote his biographer, Whitefield used ...
المحتوى
1 | |
11 | |
Testing the Faith | 121 |
Civil Society and the Civil War | 192 |
Notes | 209 |
Bibliography | 265 |
Index | 301 |
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