<p>I am especially impressed by the ways in which Block uses the oral histories she has gathered to challenge the theoretical frameworks often imposed on lived reality. Secularity, she argues throughout the book, is a much more complicated and shifting phenomenon than many assume ... people interested in Pacific Northwest life are indebted to Tina Block for an admirable scholarly endeavor. It deserves wide circulation and consideration.</p> - Brian Fraser (BC Studies) <p>...a thoughtful and thought-provoking work that offers a relatively uncommon analysis of secularism in postwar B.C.</p> - Chelsea Horton (The Ormsby Review, April 2017) <p>An excellent book will lead you through doors of thought and will open new pathways once the reading is done. Block does not disappoint. </p> - Mark McGowan, Department of History, University of Toronto (Pacific Historical Review)
The image of a rough frontier – where working men were tempted away from church on Sundays by more profane concerns – was perpetuated by postwar church leaders, who decried the decline of religious involvement.
In this pioneering book, Tina Block debunks the myth of a godless frontier, revealing a Pacific Northwest that consciously rejected the trappings of organized religion but not necessarily spirituality – and not necessarily God.
Secularism was not only the domain of the working man: women, families, and middle-class communities all helped to shape the region's secular identity. But rejection of religion led to family, gender, and class tensions.
Drawing on oral histories, census data, newspapers, and archival sources, Block explores the dynamics of Northwest secularity, grounded in the cultural permeability of the Canada–United States border, the independent spirit of those who called the region home, and their openness to secular ways of experiencing the world.
Introduction
1 Constructing the Secular Northwest: The View from the Churches
2 A "mounting tide of criticism": The Challenge to Organized Religion
3 Class, Gender, and Religious Involvement
4 Belief and Unbelief
5 "The closest thing to me": Religion, Irreligion, and the Family
6 "So much sin amid so much beauty": Secularity and Regional Identity
Conclusion
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index