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Religion in the age of decline : organisation and experience in industrial Yorkshire, 1870-1920
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ISBN: 0521561531 0521521203 0511522991 Year: 1996 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

The seemingly inexorable decline of Christianity in Britain has long fascinated historians, sociologists and churchmen. They have also been exasperated by their failure to understand its origins or chart its progress. Sceptical both of traditional accounts and of their more recent rejection by revisionist writers, S. J. D. Green concentrates scholarly attention for the first time on the 'social history of the chapel' in a characteristic industrial-urban setting. He demonstrates just why so many churches were built in late Victorian Britain, who built them, who went to them, and why. He evaluates the 'associational ideal' during its period of greatest success, and explains the causes of its decline. In this way, Religion in the Age of Decline offers a fresh interpretation of the extent and the implications of the decline of religion in twentieth-century Britain.


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The passing of Protestant England : secularisation and social change, c.1920-1960
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ISBN: 9780511780332 9780521839778 9781107407657 9780511933455 0511933452 9780511928222 051192822X 0511780338 0521839777 0511853270 1107218233 128291880X 9786612918803 051193209X 0511925719 0511930755 1107407656 Year: 2010 Publisher: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press,

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In this 2010 book S. J. D. Green offers an important account of the causes, courses and consequences of the secularisation of English society. He argues that the critical cultural transformation of modern English society was forged in the agonised abandonment of a long-domesticated Protestant, Christian tradition between 1920 and 1960. Its effects were felt across the nation and among all classes. Yet their significance in the evolution of contemporary indigenous identities remains curiously neglected in most mainstream accounts of post-Victorian Britain. Dr Green traces the decline of English ecclesiastical institutions after 1918. He also investigates the eclipse of once-common moral sensibilities during the years up to 1945. Finally, he examines why subsequent efforts to reverse these trends so comprehensively failed. His work will be of enduring interest to modern historians, sociologists of religion, and all those concerned with the future of faith in Britain and beyond.

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