Family Values and the Formation of a Christian Right Agenda


Paul Harvey

Our blog contributor Seth Dowland has just published an important article in Church History, well worth your time: " 'Family Values' and the Formation of a Christian Right Agenda," Church History 78 (September 2009): 606-631. Seth explains the unpredictable contingencies behind the success of a cadre of evangelical ministers who "developed a political philosophy that connected defense of the 'traditional family' with opposition to abortion, feminism, and gay rights." By the close of the 1970s, he argues, "the Christian right had devised rhetoric that made liberal reformers enemies of the family and positioned 'family values' as mainstream fare." Eschewing the polemical fare of journalistic accounts, Seth shows how the coalescing of the "traditional family" theme was far from predictable or inevitable; "The emergence of family values as the centerpiece of the Christian right agenda occurred as movement leaders defined a particular vision of America in a capacious rhetoric of public interest and common good. In so doing, they set terms for political debate that continue to resonate."

Next up (tomorrow) we'll have a contemporary report about many of these same issues, from a visit to Colorado Springs by a graduate student from Norway who's writing her dissertation in part on Focus on the Family. Stay tuned!

Comments

Seth Dowland said…
Thanks for the shout-out, Paul! There's an interesting conversation about many of these same issues going on over at the Christian History blog, where my friend Chris Armstrong wrote a post called "Six Things I Learned While Writing About Contemporary Fundamentalism." Some fascinating comments below the post, most from evangelicals & fundamentalists.

Looking forward to today's post!
Jason Bivins said…
Looking forward to reading this, Seth. Congrats on the nice pub.

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