Ultimately, this work offers a fresh, up-to-date examination of the historical narrative and future direction of studies of religion, culture, and politics while challenging the stale dichotomies of past interpretations. -ChoicePolitical historians have been taking religion more seriously of late and this volume shows how powerful and important that attention can be in our present moment. --American Academy of Religion"The essays in this volume present fresh approaches from some of the bestknown scholars in the field. [T]here is no doubt that the authors of the essays in this volume have made a persuasive case that historians, at the very least, can move beyond the culture wars by paying more attention to the complexity of Americans' religiously informed thinking." —Fides et Historia"This collection of essays about religion and politics in the United States in the modern era attempts to pierce through the binary thinking produced by the culture wars. . . . Throughout the volume, the writers work to transcend partisan divides, highlight key figures who were less famous than Billy Graham and Jerry Falwell, and uncover additional tensions in religious and political life by examining places of contingence, irony, and surprise." —The Christian Century"This book doesn't solve any problems, but it shows that divisions and culture wars are nothing new in a society where religion and politics often combust. The difference today is a more polarized citizenry." —Catholic News Service"This collection of essays encourages readers to look beyond predictable clashes over social issues and examine the ways in which faith has fueled 20th-century U.S. politics." —Notre Dame Magazine"The market is full of books arguing the definition of 'who is an evangelical'—questions that this collection refreshingly ignores. For those looking for something beyond that argument and for most historians either connected directly to religion and politics or who see this as a subtheme in their own work, this collection carves out unique space that would be welcome." —David P. King, author of God's Internationalists