Reviews
If you only read one book on religion and higher education, read this one. Comprehensive across time, institutional types, and religious traditions, it tells the story with clarity, humor, and grace. Fraser shows why religion has mattered for diverse college students seeking not just money but meaning from their education.
This seminal contribution revolutionizes our understanding of religion in higher education, expertly weaving together milestones and episodes to chronicle a cohesive history. It is groundbreaking for its thoughtful examination of the American university's evolution beyond Christian origins to tell a larger story of meaning-making on campus across the faith spectrum.
For decades James Fraser has directed a historian's attention to the complex interrelationships of religion and public education in the United States. In this important book, drawing upon his sweeping command of American history, Fraser uses case studies to explicate religion's continuous, influential, and shapeshifting presence in American higher education.
Disguised as a historian, James Fraser is, at heart, a storyteller with a gift for beautiful prose. This book is excellent, engaging, and important. I recommend it enthusiastically to anyone who cares about higher education, the evolution of religion on campus, or the future of our country.
Book Details
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Religion at the "Old Time College": 1800–1870
2. From Moral Philosophy to a Research University: 1870–1905
3. Chaplains, Professors, and Their Students: 1905–1925
4. Campus
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Religion at the "Old Time College": 1800–1870
2. From Moral Philosophy to a Research University: 1870–1905
3. Chaplains, Professors, and Their Students: 1905–1925
4. Campus Religion and the Fracturing of American Religion: 1925–1945
5. A Post-War Boom in Religion and Higher Education: 1945–1960
6. The Long Sixties: Charismatic Chaplains, and Radical Students: 1960–1980
7. A Second Religious Depression on Campus: 1980–2000
8. Resurgence and Difference After 9/11: 2001–2021
Afterword
Notes
Index