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ISBN: HB: 9780226232317

University of Chicago Press

October 2016

232 pp.

22.8x15.2 cm

9 halftones

HB:
£36,00
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Peaceful Conquest

Woodrow Wilson, Religion, and the New World Order

A century after his presidency, Woodrow Wilson remains one of the most compelling and complicated figures ever to occupy the Oval Office. A political outsider, Wilson brought to the presidency a distinctive, strongly held worldview, built on powerful religious traditions that informed his idea of America and its place in the world. With "A Peaceful Conquest", Cara Lea Burnidge presents the most detailed analysis yet of how Wilson's religious beliefs affected his vision of American foreign policy, with repercussions that lasted into the Cold War and beyond. Framing Wilson's intellectual development in relationship to the national religious landscape, and paying greater attention to the role of religion than in previous scholarship, Burnidge shows how Wilson's blend of Southern evangelicalism and social Christianity became a central part of how America saw itself in the world, influencing seemingly secular policy decisions in subtle, lasting ways. Ultimately, Burnidge makes a case for Wilson's religiosity as one of the key drivers of the emergence of the public conception of America's unique, indispensable role in international relations. As the presidential election cycle once again raises questions of America's place in the world, "A Peaceful Conquest" offers a fascinating excavation of its little-known roots.

About the Author

Cara Lea Burnidge is assistant professor of religion at the University of Northern Iowa.

Reviews

"Burnidge's analysis of American religion is first-rate. She does a highly effective job of contextualizing liberal Protestantism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, especially in discussing the importance of social Christianity. Yet she does much more than this: she also recognizes young Wilson's paradoxical affinities to traditionalism and modernism, and she deftly analyzes this paradox (and others) to locate the religious sources of Wilson's emerging views of politics. Wilson himself was exceedingly complex and subtle, and Burnidge matches his complexity and subtlety with an admirable clarity of analysis. This is an excellent book" – Andrew Preston, co-editor of "Faithful Republic: Religion and Politics in the 20th Century United States"

"The questions we often ask about US foreign policy circle back to one person – Woodrow Wilson. His presence enters debates over American imperial ambitions, missions to advance democracy around the world, and the conflict between idealism and realism in foreign affairs. Among academics, the term 'Wilsonianism' carries a great deal of weight because it captures the hopes and failures, the triumphs and disasters of US action in the world. But we assume we understand both the man and the term associated with him – Burnidge makes clear that we do not. In a narrative that weaves together the world that made Wilson with the world he created, Burnidge demonstrates how Wilson's ideas integrated Protestant exceptionalist views of the nation with modernist impulses of progressive imperialism. This is a story about Woodrow Wilson's ability to marshal God, the nation, the nature of democracy, and the power of imperialism to reshape the role of America in the world. It is also a story well-told, expertly argued, and a model for how to write a new kind of international religious and intellectual history" – Raymond Haberski, Jr., author of "God and War: American Civil Religion since 1945"

"'A Peaceful Conquest' is a thoughtful and well-researched analysis of the relationship between Protestantism and US foreign relations in the early twentieth century. Focusing on the career of Woodrow Wilson, it illuminates the complex way in which white middle-class 'social Christians' conceptualized race, democracy reform, and America's place in the world. In so doing, Burnidge has made an impressive contribution to our understanding of both progressive era culture and the role of religious ideas in America's foreign policy during World War I" – Ross Kennedy, "The Will to Believe: Woodrow Wilson, World War I, and America's Strategy for Peace and Security"