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The Worlds of American Intellectual History
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Table of Contents

Introduction: Opening American Thought
James T. Kloppenberg

Part One: Frames
1. What was the American Enlightenment?
Caroline Winterer

2. The "Woman Question" in the Age of Mass Democracy: From Movement History to Problem History
Leslie Butler

3. "We People of Color": Colored Cosmopolitanism and the Borders of Race
Nico Slate

4. Curating the Black Atlantic
Jonathan Holloway

Part Two: Justice
5. The Sins of Slaves and the Slaves of Sin: Toward a History of Moral Agency
Margaret Abruzzo

6. Nationalism and Cosmopolitan Humanity in Mid-Nineteenth-Century American Political Science
Duncan Kelly

7. The Political Origins of Global Justice
Samuel Moyn

Part Three: Philosophy
8. Unstiffening Theory: The Italian Magic Pragmatists and William James
Francesca Bordogna

9. The Longing for Wisdom in Twentieth-Century US Thought
Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen

10. Pain, Analytical Philosophy, and American Intellectual History
Joel Isaac

11. On Lying: Writing Philosophical History after the Enlightenment and after Arendt
Sophia Rosenfeld

Part Four: Secularization
12. Science and Religion in Postwar America
Andrew Jewett

13. Religion within the Bounds of Democracy Alone: Habermas, Rawls, and the Trans-Atlantic Debate over Public Reason
Peter Gordon

14. Christianity and Its American Fate: Where History Interrogates Secularization Theory
David Hollinger

Part Five: Method
15. Paths in the Social History of Ideas
Daniel T. Rodgers

16. Toward a Free-Range Intellectual History
Sarah Igo

17. New Directions, Then and Now
Angus Burgin

Afterword
Michael O'Brien

Index

About the Author

Joel Isaac is Associate Professor of Social Thought at University of Chicago. His current research focuses on the relations between politics and economics in twentieth-century British and American thought.

James Kloppenberg is Charles Warren Professor of American History at Harvard University, where he teaches European and American intellectual history. He has written several books on transatlantic politics and ideas from the 16th century to the present, including Toward Democracy: The Struggle for Self-Rule in European and American Thought.

Michael O'Brien taught American intellectual and cultural history at the University of Cambridge. His research focused, in particular, on the intellectual history of the American South.

Jennifer Ratner-Rosenhagen is Merle Curti Associate Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her research focuses on 19th- and 20th-century US thought and culture in transatlantic perspective.

Reviews

"will help you think better about the history of thinking, both in the United States itself and in a world still very much influenced, for better or for worse, by the ideological -- and ideational -- formations of the American intellectual landscape." -- Michael J. Kramer, Society for U.S. Intellectual History
"It will be a useful tool in advanced intellectual history classes because it exposes readers to transnational perspectives on US thought that extend beyond the North Atlantic world, where it is too often cloistered....Highly recommended."--C. R. Versen, CHOICE
"This wide-ranging anthology amply demonstrates the resurgent vitality of American intellectual history as its practitioners push their insights beyond national and disciplinary boundaries, creating a discourse characterized by unprecedented capaciousness and fluidity. What are especially exciting are the fresh forays into the challenging regions of religion and philosophy. No serious student of American thought, past or present, can afford to ignore this
book."--Jackson Lears, author of Rebirth of a Nation: The Making of Modern America, 1877-1920
"If you thought American intellectual history was provincial and elitist, this eclectic collection demonstrates just how mistaken you were. Covering topics as various, and as essential, as American secularism, 'colored cosmopolitanism,' relations between John Rawls and Jürgen Habermas, and 'wisdom' literature, leading experts in US and European intellectual history here illustrate, as never before, the wide-ranging richness of the field. These essays,
contributed by both veterans and rising stars, provide points of reference and departure that will animate our work for the next decade and beyond."--Suzanne Marchand, author of German Orientalism in the Age of
Empire: Religion, Race, and Scholarship (winner of the George Mosse Prize of the American Historical Association)
"Written by some of the best younger scholars in American intellectual history, with a few of the old guard in a supporting role, these essays demonstrate how far the field has come since New Directions in American Intellectual History (1979). They set an enlarged and imaginative agenda for this and the coming generation of scholars."--Dorothy Ross, Arthur O. Lovejoy Professor Emerita of History, Johns Hopkins University

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