Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2019
History is a word for a certain kind of reasoning: reasoning about time, about human agency, and about material records that can provide information about humans as marked by time. For many scholars—not to mention many of those outside the academy—such reasoning is antithetical to the word religion. No matter how many books prove incontrovertibly that the authors of the Talmud engaged rigorously with Greek philosophy, or that Islamic philosophers contributed to the formation of modern scientific practice, or that evangelical readers engaged significantly with Biblical criticism, scholars of religion have not (and perhaps finally cannot) upend the common perception that religion is not a site of reasoned thought, but rather a space where reason is suspended. “Religion is too important to be left in the hands of people who believe in it. Finally, historians are coming to grips with this simple truth,” David A. Hollinger opined in response to reports about the flurry of scholarly interest in religion as an effect in the modern United States. It is a good quip, but one that portrays the historian as an axiomatically rationalist hero, swooping into medieval confusion in order to give clarifying accounts of the truth behind puzzling theologies, curious myths, and archaic rituals. Hollinger suggests that religious people or religious historians cannot do this work. Believers by his lights are not to be trusted with the reasoning history demands.
I am deeply grateful to Brooke Blower for her intelligent and incisive editorial engagement, not to mention offering a soapbox on which I could stand. During the five-year gestation of this piece, I received thoughtful feedback from Steve Andrews, Ed Linenthal, and Matthew Specter. Through the 2014 poll that informed my early thinking on these subjects, I corresponded with many colleagues. I thank the eighty-five respondents to that Google survey for their replies, and I thank Christopher Allison, Chip Callahan, Chris Cantwell, Matthew J. Cressler, Edward E. Curtis IV, Janine Giordano Drake, Kate Carté, Paul Harvey, Matthew Hedstrom, Laurie Maffly-Kipp, John Lardas Modern, Robert Orsi, Sally Promey, Leigh Schmidt, Chad Seales, Skip Stout, Daniel Vaca, and Tisa Wenger for their additional exchanges. Nancy Levene and Caleb Smith offered sentence-level readings that rescued me from much more than errors of grammar.
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2 The Editors, “Religion and the Historical Profession,” The Immanent Frame, Dec. 30, 2009, https://tif.ssrc.org/2009/12/30/religion-and-the-historical-profession/ (accessed Mar. 9, 2019). Hollinger has written searchingly on the subject of authorial religious identity. See Hollinger, David A., “The Wrong Question! Please Change The Subject!” Fides et Historia 43, no. 2 (Summer/Fall 2011): 34–7Google Scholar; Hollinger, David A., After Cloven Tongues of Fire: Protestant Liberalism in Modern American History (Princeton, NJ, 2013), 138–69, 190–8Google Scholar.
3 On the emergence of historical thinking alongside and within Enlightenment thought, including eighteenth-century critiques of religion, see Brewer, Daniel, The Enlightenment Past: Reconstructing Eighteenth-Century French Thought (Cambridge, UK, 2008)Google Scholar; Frei, Hans W., The Eclipse of Biblical Narrative: A Study in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Hermeneutics (New Haven, CT, 1980)Google Scholar; Sheehan, Jonathan, The Enlightenment Bible: Translation, Scholarship, Culture (Princeton, NJ, 2007)Google Scholar; and von Mücke, Dorothea E., The Practices of the Enlightenment: Aesthetics, Authorship, and the Public (New York, 2015)Google Scholar. These scholars demonstrate that the Enlightenment did not nullify religion; rather, they describe in different ways how religious texts and ideas survived and thrived in the context of emergent scholarly techniques of interpretation. Early modern European scholars—historians, theologians, Biblical critics, philosophers—did not abandon religion in favor of history; they used history as a tool, and as they did, those scholars intensified relations to religion.
4 The number of books published per year in U.S. history with religion as one of their main subjects has increased significantly over the last thirty years. To make a simple comparison: the number of books published in U.S. history on religion with a copyright of 2015 is four times the number published in 1995. Rather than provide the entirety of the available bibliography of 2015 publications, I refer readers to Paul Putz, “New Books Alert: 2015 Year in Preview, Part One (January–April),” Religion in American History, (Dec. 19, 2014), http://usreligion.blogspot.com/2014/12/new-books-alert-2015-year-in-preview.html (accessed Mar. 9, 2019); and Paul Putz, “New Books Alert: 2015 Year in Preview, Part Two (May–August),” Religion in American History (Apr. 20, 2015), http://usreligion.blogspot.com/2015/04/new-books-alert-2015-year-in-preview.html (accessed Mar. 9, 2019). On the recent popularity of religion as a theme of historical study, for instance, see Butler, Jon, “Jack-in-the-Box Faith: The Religion Problem in Modern American History,” Journal of American History 90, no. 4 (Mar. 2004): 1357–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Jon Butler, “Religion and the Historical Profession,” The Immanent Frame (Dec. 30, 2009), http://blogs.ssrc.org/tif/2009/12/30/religion-and-the-historical-profession/ (accessed Mar. 9, 2019).
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9 Psychologists at Harvard, the University of Virginia, and the University of Washington created “Project Implicit” to develop Hidden Bias Tests (or Implicit Association Tests) to measure unconscious bias. To take Project Implicit's Hidden Bias Tests, go to https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/ (accessed Mar. 9, 2019).
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11 Shankar Vedantam, “How To Fight Racial bias When It's Silent And Subtle,” NPR.org, July 19, 2013, http://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2013/07/19/203306999/How-To-Fight-Racial-Bias-When-Its-Silent-And-Subtle (accessed Mar. 9, 2019).
12 For examples of historical scholarship specifically focused on the history of religious bigotry, see Davis, David Brion, “Some Themes of Counter-Subversion: An Analysis of Anti-Masonic, Anti-Catholic, and Anti-Mormon Literature,” The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 47, no. 2 (Sept. 1960): 205–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Dinnerstein, Leonard, Antisemitism in America (New York, 1995)Google Scholar; Fluhman, J. Spencer, “A Peculiar People”: Anti-Mormonism and the Making of Religion in Nineteenth-Century America (Chapel Hill, 2013)Google Scholar; Franchot, Jenny, Roads to Rome: The Antebellum Protestant Encounter with Catholicism (Berkeley, CA, 1994)Google Scholar; and Mason, Patrick, The Mormon Menace: Violence and Anti-Mormonism in the Postbellum South (New York, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
13 To think through this particular problem, I work in conversation with many theorists of religion who have proved the consequential role of scholarly classification in everyday political governance and social life. The development of categories, and the pursuit of their effects on how we think, defines some of the programmatic work done under the auspices of the academic field called Religious studies. See Smith, Jonathan Z., Relating Religion: Essays in the Study of Religion (Chicago, 2004)Google Scholar. For an assessment of some of the tensions in Smith's work, see Levene, Nancy K., “Courses and Canons in the Study of Religion (With Continual Reference to Jonathan Z. Smith),” Journal of the American Academy of Religion 80, no. 4 (2012): 998–1024CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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39 Ibid., 17.
40 Ibid, 18.
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