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El. knyga: British Christianity and the Second World War

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This volume looks at the role of Christianity in British statecraft, politics, the media, the armed forces and in the education and socialization of the young during the Second World War. Despite previous scholarly neglect, this volume demonstrates the significance and legacy of the Second World War for British Christianity through chapters on broadcasting, publishing and education. Further chapters examine the spiritual mobilization of nation and Empire; Mass Observation's commentary on religious life; Catholic responses to strategic bombing; the morality of killing; the nature of Jewish-Christian relations; and the situation of British army chaplains in Germany.

Although levels of churchgoing were falling in mainstream British Protestantism, the broader culture of British Christendom remained robust, problematising the classic chronology of secularisation. However, if the war caused a 'resacralization' of British society, the indications are that in this moment of resurgence lay the seeds of future problems. Because of the endemic racism of British society and its churches, post-war immigrants from the Caribbean often encountered a Christian Britain that was different from that portrayed in wartime propaganda. This volume thus identifies the slow-burning problems that may have contributed to the cultural and religious crisis of the 1960s.

This volume exposes the enduring importance of Christianity in British national life and will be of interest to historians of twentieth-century Christianity, British society and the Second World War, and religion in times of conflict.

Examines the role of Christianity in British statecraft, politics, media, the armed forces and in the education and socialization of the young during the Second World War.

Recenzijos

Each of the contributors provides an insightful reflection on the experience of British Christianity during the war. The book helps to paint a better picture of religious sensibilities in time of war and the ways it was manifested in the home, in the armed forces, both at home and abroad. Each chapter is concise and well researched enabling the book to be accessible to many readers * THE DOWNSIDE REVIEW *

Notes on Contributors ix
Acknowledgements xi
Note on Footnotes xii
List of Abbreviations
xiii
1 Introduction
1(24)
Michael Snape
2 The British State and Spiritual Mobilization during the Second World War
25(21)
Philip Williamson
3 Radio Religion: The British Broadcasting Corporation and Faith Propaganda at `Home' and `Overseas' in the Second World War
46(20)
Hannah Elias
4 Getting the Message Out: Publishing `British Christianity' 1939-43
66(16)
Keith Robbins
Stuart Bell
5 Christianity, Culture, and the Universities in Wartime England
82(17)
Matthew Grimley
6 Mass Observation, Religion, and the Second World War: When `Cooper's Snoopers' Caught the Spirit
99(18)
Clive D. Field
1 British Sunday Schools during the Second World War
117(16)
Caitriona McCartney
8 Principled or Pragmatic? English Nonconformist Opposition to Pacifism in the Inter-War Period
133(17)
Stuart Bell
9 Where Loyalties Lie: English Catholic Responses to Allied Strategic Bombing in the Second World War
150(12)
Joshua Madrid
10 British Christians and the Morality of Killing in the Second World War
162(18)
John Broom
11 Jewish-Christian Relations in the Second World War
180(18)
Jonathan M. Lewis
12 Agents of Occupation or Reconciliation? Army Chaplains in Germany in the Summer of 1945
198(17)
Peter Howson
Index 215
MICHAEL SNAPE is Michael Ramsey Professor of Anglican Studies at Durham University. STUART BELL is an Honorary Research Fellow of St John's College, Durham University. MICHAEL SNAPE is Michael Ramsey Professor of Anglican Studies at Durham University. PHILIP WILLIAMSON is Emeritus Professor of modern history at Durham University. STUART BELL is an Honorary Research Fellow of St John's College, Durham University. MATTHEW GRIMLEY is associate professor in modern history at the University of Oxford and fellow and tutor at Merton College. CAITRIONA MCCARTNEY is an Honorary Fellow at the Department of Theology and Religion, Durham University. PETER HOWSON is the author of Padre, Prisoner and Pen-Pusher. The World War One Experiences of the Reverend Benjamin O'Rorke and Muddling Through. The Organisation of British Army Chaplaincy in World War One. For Boydell's Church of England Record Society Series, he edited The First World War Diaries of the Rt. Rev. Llewellyn Gwynne (2019). As a member of the Royal Army Chaplains' Department Howson served in Germany during the period 1977to 1997.