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Rating: Summary: Fascinating Review: Harding does not attempt an expose, per se, although readers will be disturbed, perplexed and perhaps shocked by some of this book. For her research, the author immersed herself in the world of evangelical fundamentalism, getting to know the people, even becoming (in a sense) an insider herself. The fruit of her time is The Book of Jerry Falwell, an exploration of the way words are used in the fundamentalist "subculture" (though I am not sure if this is a designation Harding herself uses), specifically in the ministry of one of modern fundamentalism's key figures, televangelist Jerry Falwell.The author's analysis rings true to life, for over the course of the past couple of years I have been on a pilgrimage away from my fundamentalist past, and can identify with many of her observations. For example, nowadays in conversation with fundamentalists I find I have to adapt my language and way of thinking to their language and way of thinking. When I have connected my worldview (still Christian, just not fundamentalist) to theirs, I can start to understand. Similarly, I find myself having to suspend my own mental system when talking to my new-age friends, and learn how words work in the world they inhabit. For this reason, Harding's perceptive commentary on fundamentalist political and religious speech resonates with my own perceptions, and thus emerges as fascinating, incisive and authentic.
Rating: Summary: Review. Review: Harding's provocative title promises in no uncertain terms to tell a good story. I experienced suspense as the Book of Jerry Falwell carefully delineated an important dimension of the story of America, then, more broadly and intensely, the story of speech, and of listening, making calmly powerful suggestions about the nature of both. With the hint of an irony that is at once intelligent and warm, Harding has written a rare book, a familiar book, about a culture often seen, from the corner of our eyes, in the side-view mirrors of our cars, one much closer than it appears. This author doesn't need to stray from a thorough elucidation of her subject to meditate intently upon larger questions, which is a continual delight. This book augurs well for anthropology in America.
Rating: Summary: Inside Jerry Falwell Review: In light of Rev. Falwell's unfortunate comments about the tragedy of Sept. 11, 2001, I recommend this book to anyone seeking to understand, "Why would that guy say that stuff?" Harding presents an objective, intelligent, perceptive analysis of the way that Fundamentalist language shapes the way in which they relate to the world, and how Jerry Falwell changed that shaping from withdrawal to the active Moral Majority of the 1980s. Harding combs through Falwell's history and sermons to observe how the language of "being born again" affects the listener, showing Falwell's shift from separatism to political activism. She critiques both Falwell and Falwell's critics in a fair and keenly insightful way. Good reading and good understanding.
Rating: Summary: Inside Jerry Falwell Review: In light of Rev. Falwell's unfortunate comments about the tragedy of Sept. 11, 2001, I recommend this book to anyone seeking to understand, "Why would that guy say that stuff?" Harding presents an objective, intelligent, perceptive analysis of the way that Fundamentalist language shapes the way in which they relate to the world, and how Jerry Falwell changed that shaping from withdrawal to the active Moral Majority of the 1980s. Harding combs through Falwell's history and sermons to observe how the language of "being born again" affects the listener, showing Falwell's shift from separatism to political activism. She critiques both Falwell and Falwell's critics in a fair and keenly insightful way. Good reading and good understanding.
Rating: Summary: A Good Start to a Rich and Rewarding Subject Review: One of the biggest insults I ever received was from a friend who thought he was saying something good about me, telling me, as if I'd broken some law of mutual exclusivity, I was both a Christian and an intellectual. I was an intellectual first, and had a born-again experience -- and my first real prayer offered to a God I scarcely knew included the phrase that, though I would follow Christ, I would not become one of those "nutty religious-righters". My first lesson as a Christian: you don't dictate terms to God. Now people who meet me with no exposition to my life tend to stereotype me pretty quickly, because the last firewall of the bigot in the USA is that against Christians. Increasingly at the end of the twentieth and dawn of the twenty-first century after Christ, "extremists" are defined as those who seem to actually believe what they profess to believe; and to believe fervently is the mark of a cultist, and probably a threat to society; and Christians are thought and written about, though not yet so mercilessly, in the same sort of ways that Jews were toward the end of the nineteenth century. Yet if God offered revelation to the Jews, not only of God's nature ("I Am That I Am") and of man's fall from Grace, and God came as a Jew in Jesus as sacrifice for our sins, and Christ rose from the dead to prove His power, one cannot be half-hearted in clinging to that salvation, though accepting it does not make one perfect. Throughout Christian history there has been an ebb and flow. At certain periods -- the twelfth century, the sixteenth, and the twentieth, for instance -- many Christians see their faith as becoming too worldly and corrupted and there was an impulse to go back to roots, to fundamentals, and rebuild as if from scratch the Church's relationship with God. Such an impulse drove modern "fundamentalism", a nebulous term that is increasingly being defined by those who would eradicate it. As in the twelfth century, when there was a rise of monasticism to separate the Church from society, in the twentieth century the impulse was pretty sedate. But in the 1970s many "fundamentalists" and evangelicals became increasingly politically active to join the increasingly complex marketplace of ideas, so that Christ wouldn't be lost in the babble of modern plurality. Dodging from one party to the next, first with the Democrats and Jimmy Carter, they were not isolated as enemies until they supported Ronald Reagan, when the intellecutal elite, to use an idea of Solzhenitsyn's, in the academic, artistic, and media communities began scapgoating Christian fundamentalists. The biggest scapegoats were the perceived leaders, the most famous (or infamous) being Jerry Falwell, whose name, in a wacky sort of way, became synonymous with intolerance and extremism. Because of media conditioning Christian fundamentalists (in precis: those who actually believe what they profess, and live that seven days a week and not just an hour on Sunday) have been perceived as easily-manipulated rubes, a nuisance rather than a subject for academic attention. However, just as people cannot be categorized simply by reference to their race, gender, or nationality, Christian fundamentalists cannot be put in a jar and labelled, for they come from all walks of life and all degrees of learning and intelligence. Though we hate to feel we're living under a microscope, there is some small glimmer of hope that this book will help to raise understanding and a level of tolerance toward fundamentalists, before society has to have the jolt it had to have tolerance for the Jews after World War II.
Rating: Summary: ONE OF THE MOST UNINTERESTING PEOPLE IN AMERICA Review: There is absolutely no substance in anything Jerry Falwell has to say. No real solutions for the United States' real problems. Would anybody like to tell me his opinion on matters such as...THE DRUG COMPANIES AND THEIR CHOKEHOLD ON OUR NATIONAL LEADERS, ESPECIALLY THE ONES HE LIKES.
This writer doesn't convince me that Falwell is anything but just another right-wing religious nut taking up space and writing and spouting off useless trash.
Rating: Summary: A good mix of history and cultural study Review: This book offers a survey of Fundamentalist politics from the perspective of the fundamentalist leader Jerry Falwell. Harding weaves together historical analysis with anthropological commentary whilst also letting the subjects speak for themselves through the inclusion of lengthy quotes from fundamentalist preachers.
One of Harding's main comments is on the often misunderstood rehetorics of fundamentalist political language and she explains how they what fundamentalists hear when Falwell speaks is often different to how other hear the same words. The book is divided into chapters (obviously!) with each dealing with a different topic (eg abortion, creationism etc). The strength of this book is that it gives a context through fundamentalist history of contemporary positions. The end result is a very readable fairminded glimpse into the different world that is christian fundamentalist politcs and one that is recommended for those interested in the subject.
My one major criticism is that their is often a lack of theological grasp of some of the issues involved which of course you cannot particularly blame Harding for (she is an anthropologist). This is a book that would have benefitted from a co-author (Mark Noll immediately springs to mind).
Overall though this is definitely recommended.
Rating: Summary: Well-Written and Researched Review: This was a very readable study of an otherwise complex subject matter. In spite of all the names and dates interspersed, it did not detract from the flow of the narrative. I appreciated the endnotes to substantiate the author's facts. This is definitely one of the more better books printed on this controversial historical subject matter.
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