The Nature of Church Camp: An Environmental History of Outdoor
Ministry, 1945–1980 by Christopher W. Anderson explores the
mid-twentieth-century history of religious camps and retreat centers
to provide new insights into the history of environmentalism in the
United States. Ecumenical Protestantism and the ecology movement both
changed the calculus of American morality after World War II. Through
archival material, case study visits, and oral histories, Anderson
finds that these institutions often reacted to ecological critiques
with temperate but gradual reforms. However, camps and outdoor
ministries, by virtue of their natural settings and sizable acreage,
soon provided a new way to explore the history of spirituality and
ecology, moving away from the conference campus and using nostalgia
for the frontier instead to make arguments about the meaning of the
American nation and the value of democracy. This new way of thinking
was reflected throughout the camps and enthusiastically endorsed
decentralized small-group camping. By examining the conduct of church
camps and conferences before, during, and after the ecological era,
Anderson shows how environmental stewardship became the dominant
paradigm for Protestant environmentalism, why that is a flawed and
fractious model, and why it has stalled.
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An Environmental History of Outdoor Ministry, 1945–1980
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781666915655
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter