Aristotle and early Christian thought
In: Studies in philosophy and theology in late antiquity
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In: Studies in philosophy and theology in late antiquity
"Citizenship is increasingly the core concept by which human belonging is defined but do we really understand what it is? This book develops an evolutionist argument to challenge accepted ideas about citizenship and question how well it fits between political prescriptions for sociality and human nature. Though citizenship reflects a dominant, enduring political model of belonging, it has been contested from a range of standpoints such as feminism, social exclusion and human rights. Using a novel Darwinian paradigm, Edwards exposes the limits of citizenship conceived in wholly or overtly political terms, and endorses the validity of citizenship struggles that implicitly and explicitly champion human belonging over political belonging. "--
In: Cambridge review of international affairs, Volume 36, Issue 6, p. 815-819
ISSN: 1474-449X
In: les Nouvelles - Journal of the Licensing Executives Society, Volume LVI No. 3
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In: les Nouvelles - Journal of the Licensing Executives Society, Volume LVI No. 1
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In: les Nouvelles - Journal of the Licensing Executives Society, Volume LV No. 3
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In: Genealogy: open access journal, Volume 3, Issue 2, p. 30
ISSN: 2313-5778
Christian nationalism in the United States has neither been singular nor stable. The country has seen several Christian nationalist ventures come and go throughout its history. Historians are currently busy documenting the plurality of Christian nationalisms, understanding them more as deliberate projects rather than as components of a suprahistorical secularization process. This essay joins in that work. Its focus is the World War II and early Cold War era, one of the heydays of Christian nationalist enthusiasm in America—and the one that shaped our ongoing culture wars between "evangelical" conservatives and "godless" liberals. One forgotten and admittedly paradoxical pathway to wartime Christian nationalism was the world ecumenical movement ("ecumenical" here meaning intra-Protestant). Protestant ecumenism curated the transformation of 1920s and 1930s Christian internationalism into wartime Christian Americanism. They involved many political and intellectual elites along the way. In pioneering many of the geopolitical concerns of Cold War evangelicals, ecumenical Protestants aided and abetted the Christian conservative ascendancy that wields power even into the present.
In: les Nouvelles - Journal of the Licensing Executives Society, Volume LII No. 1
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In: A journal of church and state: JCS, Volume 58, Issue 3, p. 580-581
ISSN: 2040-4867
In: Diplomatic history, Volume 40, Issue 5, p. 1027-1029
ISSN: 1467-7709
In: Journal of church and state: JCS, Volume 58, Issue 3, p. 580-581
ISSN: 0021-969X
In: Design with the Desert, p. 411-426
In: Pace Law Review, Volume 30, p. 124
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In: Diplomatic history, Volume 33, Issue 1, p. 67-94
ISSN: 1467-7709