Stumping God - (Studies in Rhetoric & Religion) by Andrew P Hogue (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- For more than three decades, American presidential candidates have desperately sought the conservative Evangelical vote.
- About the Author: Andrew Hogue is a lecturer in Political Science and Director of Civic Education & Community Service at Baylor University.
- 340 Pages
- Political Science, Political Process
- Series Name: Studies in Rhetoric & Religion
Description
About the Book
In compelling and illuminating fashion, Stumping God explains the roots of modern religious politics and encourages readers to move beyond the haze of rhetorical appeals that--for better or worse--continually clouds the political process.Book Synopsis
For more than three decades, American presidential candidates have desperately sought the conservative Evangelical vote. With an ever broadening base of support, the Evangelical movement in America may now seem to many a very powerful lobbyist on Capitol Hill. As Andrew Hogue shows, however, this was not always the case.
In Stumping God Hogue deconstructs the 1980 presidential election, in which Ronald Reagan would defeat Jimmy Carter and John B. Anderson, and uncovers a disproportionately heavy reliance on religious rhetoric--a rhetoric that would be the catalyst for a new era of presidential politics. Until 1980, the idea that conservative politics was somehow connected with conservative theology was distant from the American imagination. Hogue describes the varying streams of influence that finally converged by the Reagan-Carter election, including the rapidly rising Religious Right. By 1980, candidates were not only challenged to appeal rhetorically to a conservative religious base, but found it necessary to make public their once-private religious commitments.
In compelling and illuminating fashion, Stumping God explains the roots of modern religious politics and encourages readers to move beyond the haze of rhetorical appeals that--for better or worse--continually clouds the political process.
Review Quotes
... devastatingly accurate in his discription of how Ronald Reagan learned the value of religous speech and used it for political advantage.
--Rev. Harry Know, president and CEO of the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice "Conscience"About the Author
Andrew Hogue is a lecturer in Political Science and Director of Civic Education & Community Service at Baylor University. He lives in Waco, Texas.