Field of study: History.Dr. John Wigger, Dissertation Supervisor.Includes vita."May 2017."[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] "Man Up: Muscular Christianity and the Making of 20th-Century American Religion," examines the history of muscular Christianity in 20th-century America. Specifically, I analyze how liberal Protestants, Catholics, Mormons, fundamentalists, and evangelicals used muscular Christianity to navigate the cultural waters from religious outsiders into the mainstream. My project began by asking why millions of Americans hear sermons filled with sports analogies, attend Bible studies that follow a basketball game, and read books written by NFL quarterbacks? I discovered that over the course of...
In the mid-nineteenth century, when the idea of religion as a private matter connected to the home a...
Includes bibliographical references.Includes illustrations and maps.As yet men have not found a sati...
Christianity has markedly patriarchal traits, and by tradition men have played the dominant role in ...
This presentation will examine how muscular Christianity served as a catalyst in forging new constru...
In 1976 Sports Illustrated journalist Frank Deford coined the term “Sportianity” to describe a newly...
This thesis is a critical examination of muscular Christianity, “a movement emphasizing rigorous phy...
It has been widely argued that during the nineteenth century the English public schools and the Prot...
Published version of an article in the journal: Journal of Religion and Society. Also available from...
The purpose of this study was to analyze how different religious groups perceived the historical dev...
Religion in America persisted along traditional Christian lines until the 1870s. It was then that th...
Over the past 30–40 years there has been a steady growth in the academic literature concerning the r...
This thesis examines how college football in the late nineteenth century serves as a lens through wh...
Around the turn of the 20th century a movement called Muscular Christianity was extremely influentia...
This thesis examines whether American civil religion, in its enactment in daily American life, is co...
This dissertation is an examination of muscular Christian themes in contemporary American sport cult...
In the mid-nineteenth century, when the idea of religion as a private matter connected to the home a...
Includes bibliographical references.Includes illustrations and maps.As yet men have not found a sati...
Christianity has markedly patriarchal traits, and by tradition men have played the dominant role in ...
This presentation will examine how muscular Christianity served as a catalyst in forging new constru...
In 1976 Sports Illustrated journalist Frank Deford coined the term “Sportianity” to describe a newly...
This thesis is a critical examination of muscular Christianity, “a movement emphasizing rigorous phy...
It has been widely argued that during the nineteenth century the English public schools and the Prot...
Published version of an article in the journal: Journal of Religion and Society. Also available from...
The purpose of this study was to analyze how different religious groups perceived the historical dev...
Religion in America persisted along traditional Christian lines until the 1870s. It was then that th...
Over the past 30–40 years there has been a steady growth in the academic literature concerning the r...
This thesis examines how college football in the late nineteenth century serves as a lens through wh...
Around the turn of the 20th century a movement called Muscular Christianity was extremely influentia...
This thesis examines whether American civil religion, in its enactment in daily American life, is co...
This dissertation is an examination of muscular Christian themes in contemporary American sport cult...
In the mid-nineteenth century, when the idea of religion as a private matter connected to the home a...
Includes bibliographical references.Includes illustrations and maps.As yet men have not found a sati...
Christianity has markedly patriarchal traits, and by tradition men have played the dominant role in ...