From Prize-Winning Dissertation to...
The book's amazon.com release date is December 13, just in time to find its places under the Christmas trees of RiAH blog readers.
Winner of the Allan Nevins Prize as a dissertation, Darren's book is an erudite and persuasive account of how southern evangelical migrants transformed California's culture and politics.
"Rather than an invention of Falwell and Robertson's Religious Right," he argues, "evangelicalism's politicization was a product of an earlier time made possible by an earlier generation, a generation that came of age on the West Coast during
From Bible Belt to Sunbelt explores the religious and political interchange between the South and
Several aspects of Darren's book thoroughly impress me. First, he very sensitively -- without a trace of scholarly condescension -- includes the voices of "plain folk," many of whom he interviewed for the book. Second, Darren mines untapped and rich veins of archival sources. Few historians have visited both the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and the Pat Boone Headquarters. He also gained access to the private records of many southern
Buy it, read it, assign it.
Comments
Great book for courses!
The 51st Annual Allan Nevins Dissertation Prize, 2011
Prize: A certificate, 1,000 dollars, publication, and consideration for adoption in the History Book Club. A certificate will be presented to the dissertation sponsor. The prize will be awarded at the annual meeting of the society in May, 2011.
1,000 dollars! And a certificate from sub-literates too!
I'm just having some fun with y'all, but this is the sort of thing that's mocked on this blog.
I'm sure it's a good book. It might win the Sarah Palin-Walmart Award too. They'll probably dig it. And I bet it'll pay more than 1,000 dollars, too.