AMERICAN GRACE – NOW IN PAPERBACK!
“This is a big, multifaceted work….intellectually powerful.” —Robert Wright, The New York Times Book Review.
“Perhaps the most sweeping look yet at contemporary American religion.” –Michelle Boorstein, The Washington Post
NEW IN THE PAPERBACK EDITION – In this new edition, Putnam and Campbell bring new data to bear on the ever-changing religious and political landscape in America–the Great Recession, the rise of the Tea Party, and the increasing prominence of anti-religious voices. Having interviewed thousands of Americans for the first edition of the book, they have now re-interviewed the same people five years later, in order to find out what has changed and what has stayed the same.
To find out more about American Grace, or if you have any media requests, please be in touch with us. Please contact us by EMAIL to let us know what your story is about, and when your deadline is.
Kylie Siegel
Saguaro Seminar: Civic Engagement in America
Kennedy School of Government
Harvard University
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AMERICAN GRACE WINS BEST POLITICAL SCIENCE BOOK OF 2010-2011.
Robert D. Putnam (Harvard) and David E. Campbell (Univ. of Notre Dame) have been awarded the Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award for American Grace: How Religion Divides and Unites Us (Simon and Schuster). The Wilson Award of the American Political Science Assocation (APSA) recognizes the “best book published in the U.S. during the previous calendar year on government, politics, or international affairs”.
AMERICAN GRACE
American Grace is a major achievement, a fascinating look at religion in today’s America. Unique among nations, America is deeply religious, religiously diverse and remarkably tolerant. But in recent decades, the nation’s religious landscape has been reshaped.
America has experienced three seismic shocks, say Robert Putnam and David Campbell. In the 1960s religious observance plummeted. Then, in the 1970s and 1980s a conservative reaction produced the rise of evangelicalism and the Religious Right. Since the 1990s, however, young people, turned off by that linkage between faith and conservative politics, have abandoned organized religion entirely. The result: growing polarization. The ranks of religious conservatives and secular liberals have swelled, leaving a dwindling group of religious moderates in between. At the same time, personal interfaith ties are strengthening. Interfaith marriage has increased, while religious identities are increasingly fluid. Putnam and Campbell show how this denser web of personal ties brings surprising interfaith tolerance, notwithstanding the so-called “culture wars.”
American Grace is based on two of the most comprehensive surveys ever conducted on religion and public life in America. It includes a dozen in-depth profiles of diverse congregations across the country, which illuminate the trends described by Putnam and Campbell in the lives of real Americans.
Nearly every chapter of American Grace contains a surprise about American religious life. Among them:
- Between one-third and one-half of all American marriages are interfaith;
- Roughly one-third of Americans have switched religions at some point in their lives;
- Young people are more opposed to abortion than their parents but more accepting of gay marriage;
- Even fervently religious Americans believe that people in other faiths can get to heaven;
- Religious Americans are better neighbors than secular Americans—more generous with their time and treasure, even for secular causes—but the explanation has less to do with faith than with communities of faith;
- Jews are the most broadly popular religious group in America today.
American Grace promises to be the most important book in decades about American religious life, and an essential book for understanding our nation today.