The Burned-Over District: The Social and Intellectual History of Enthusiastic Religion in Western New York, 1800-1850

by Whitney R. Cross

Paperback, 1965

Status

Available

Call number

277.47

Collection

Publication

Harper Torchbooks (1965), Paperback, 383 pages

Description

"Burned-over District was a name applied to a small region, during a limited period of history, to indicate a particular phase of development. It described the religious character of western New York during the first half of the nineteenth century. Time, subject, and area have thus all combined to confine the scope of this book. The study has nevertheless seemed rewarding, mainly because its implications transcend all three limitations."The meaning expands in a geographical sense because this one area provides a case history in the westward transit of New England culture. Likewise, it is representative as a sample of the change from youth to maturity in a single section affected by continuing westward movement. The subject of religion has broader significance in this period and locality than might at first appear. This section was the storm center, and religious forces were the driving propellants of social movements important for the whole country in that generation. As far as time goes, this book is an illustration of the way in which the minds of one era help to form the destinies of succeeding generations. Neither the causes of the Civil War nor the origins of national prohibition, to cite only two prominent examples, can be thoroughly understood without reference to the Burned-over District."-from the Preface… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member atdCross
In my opinion, we cannot understood the religious attitude of the today's Christian mind and the political culture without referring back to the "burned-over district," even after 170 years! 1800 to 1850 seems to be a time of Christian revival and extremism, religious enthusiasm, rise in political
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engagement against the culture, and the birth of various "christian" cults, some that still exist or have influence today, including fanaticism with respect to the Millennium. Reading this book, I could not help but realize that revival is even more complicated, vulnerable, and susceptible to the surrounding cultural and political environment than I could have ever guessed. Anyone who has any real interest in American revivals needs to read this.

By the way, Cross discusses revivals under Finney in a somewhat extensive manner (which is why I bought the book but, reading it, got more than I bargained for).
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Language

ISBN

none

Local notes

Torchbooks TB 1242
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