Varieties of Southern Religious History: Essays in Honor of Donald G. Mathews is comprised of fifteen chapters written by former students of renowned historian Donald G. Mathews. A distinguished Professor Emeritus of History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Mathews is known for his pioneering research on the religious and social history of the Southern United States. In a tribute to their mentor’s influence and scholarship, these historians address the many complexities that have shaped Southern religious history
Abdel Ross Wentz (1883-1976) of the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg joked about his smal...
Because the first Jews came to America in 1654, a stream of books and essays (p. xi) has been publ...
The article reviews the book James Petigru Boyce: A Southern Baptist Statesman, by Thomas J. Nettles...
Varieties of Southern Religious History: Essays in Honor of Donald G. Mathews. Edited by Regina D. S...
This severely foreshortened anthology from the 1981 Citadel Conference on the South consists of 11 p...
Review of the book The Origins of Southern Evangelicalism: Religious Revivalism in the South Carolin...
Woods, A History of the Catholic Church in the American South, 1513-1900. by Maura Jane Farrelly; Mo...
A Neglected Study Religion and the Civil War Era As the editors note in their introduction, the ...
It is appropriate that this volume stresses Florida’s heritage of diversity because Samuel Proctor i...
Over the past few decades, the study of southern history has experienced an impressive scholarly ren...
Review of the book, The Southern Enigma: Essays on Race, Class, and Folk Culture, edited by Walter J...
Anyone who has taught a course in U.S. religious history knows the daunting challenge of adequately ...
According to the reviewer, “Robins does an excellent job of placing Tomlinson into a proper historic...
Honoring a Giant in Southern History I vividly remember the first time I read Bertram Wyatt-Brown\u2...
For southern historians it sometimes seems as if our understanding of southern masculinity has not p...
Abdel Ross Wentz (1883-1976) of the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg joked about his smal...
Because the first Jews came to America in 1654, a stream of books and essays (p. xi) has been publ...
The article reviews the book James Petigru Boyce: A Southern Baptist Statesman, by Thomas J. Nettles...
Varieties of Southern Religious History: Essays in Honor of Donald G. Mathews. Edited by Regina D. S...
This severely foreshortened anthology from the 1981 Citadel Conference on the South consists of 11 p...
Review of the book The Origins of Southern Evangelicalism: Religious Revivalism in the South Carolin...
Woods, A History of the Catholic Church in the American South, 1513-1900. by Maura Jane Farrelly; Mo...
A Neglected Study Religion and the Civil War Era As the editors note in their introduction, the ...
It is appropriate that this volume stresses Florida’s heritage of diversity because Samuel Proctor i...
Over the past few decades, the study of southern history has experienced an impressive scholarly ren...
Review of the book, The Southern Enigma: Essays on Race, Class, and Folk Culture, edited by Walter J...
Anyone who has taught a course in U.S. religious history knows the daunting challenge of adequately ...
According to the reviewer, “Robins does an excellent job of placing Tomlinson into a proper historic...
Honoring a Giant in Southern History I vividly remember the first time I read Bertram Wyatt-Brown\u2...
For southern historians it sometimes seems as if our understanding of southern masculinity has not p...
Abdel Ross Wentz (1883-1976) of the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg joked about his smal...
Because the first Jews came to America in 1654, a stream of books and essays (p. xi) has been publ...
The article reviews the book James Petigru Boyce: A Southern Baptist Statesman, by Thomas J. Nettles...