Ep97. The Miracle of Religion in Modern Manhattan, Jon Butler

Ep97. The Miracle of Religion in Modern Manhattan, Jon Butler

I sat down with historian Jon Butler to discuss his book God in Gotham which explores religion in Manhattan from the last C19th to midC20th. We discuss how - contrary to much opinion (then and now) - modernity, urban density, and plurality did not prove a stranglehold on religion in this most city of cities but proved fertile ground for its flourishing. We also discuss religion, race, and activism in this period, in particular the efforts of the Reverends Adam Clayton Powell and Adam Clayton Powell Jr. We also explore what he dubs 'God's Urban Hothouse' the particularly fertile theological institutions (Union and the Jewish Theological Seminary) and prominent theologians and religious figures who worked in this time (e.g. Heschel, Day, Niebuhr, Tillich, Ida Bell Robinson, the Powells again). It is a rich discussion about an incredible story.

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Ep45. Remembering Lived Lives, Michael Jimenez

Ep45. Remembering Lived Lives, Michael Jimenez

I sat down with Michael Jimenez to talk about his attempt to take the foreignness of history to another level. We engage his book, Remembering Lived Lives: A Historiography from the Underside of Modernity (Cascade, Books, 2017) - and I ask him about how good history and theology does not forget to remember the past, empathetic reading, Barth's view of history, engaging history through cinema and image, and how history can be seen as resistance.

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