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{{Project|Has project output=Content|Has sponsor=McNair ProjectsCenter
|Has title=American Conservatism
|Has owner=Anne Dayton,
}}
 
==Summary==
James W. Fitfield, Jr. was a mid century Congregationalist minister who "set about convincing America’s Protestant clergy that America was a Christian nation in which government must be kept from interfering with the expression of God’s will in market economics" Stewart (2017). Fitfield's legacy is central to Kevin M. Kruse's "One Nation under God: How Corporate America Invented Christian America" (2015). Kruse, a historian of the American South at Princeton University, argues that the idea of the United States as a christian nation grew out of opposition to the New Deal 'when Corporate leaders allied with conservative clergyman [like Fitfield] to promote 'Christian libertarianism' (Kerstetter 2016). Kruse has previously written a prizewinning history of desegregation in Atlanta.
One Nation under God has been positively reviewed, although reviewers are not convinced that corporations played a significant role in promoting Christian libertarianism. The positive reviews included here include one Hart (2015), written by a professor at Hillsdale College, published in the Wall Street Journal.
Toy (1970) is a history of Fitfield's spiritual mobilization movement. Harvey (1971) discusses the tensions between Fitfield's congregation and its parent denomination. Haddington (2010) and Harvey (1970) in this subsection are from publications Rice does not subscribe to.
pages = {738--739},
file = {Full Text PDF:files/193/Kerstetter - 2016 - italicOne Nation Under God How Corporate Americ.pdf:application/pdf }
}
 
==Irving Kristol==
 
'''Krugman, Paul. 2017. “Opinion | Who Ate Republicans’ Brains?” The New York Times, July 31, sec. Opinion. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/31/opinion/republicans-trumpcare-obamacare-lies.html.
'''
 
@article{krugman_opinion_2017,
chapter = {Opinion},
title = {Opinion {\textbar} {Who} {Ate} {Republicans}’ {Brains}?},
issn = {0362-4331},
url = {https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/31/opinion/republicans-trumpcare-obamacare-lies.html },
abstract = {Four decades of intellectual and moral deterioration.},
language = {en-US},
urldate = {2017-07-31},
journal = {The New York Times},
author = {Krugman, Paul},
month = jul,
year = {2017},
keywords = {Conservatism (US Politics), Graham, Lindsey, Health Insurance and Managed Care, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (2010), Republican Party, Trump, Donald J, United States Politics and Government},
file = {Snapshot:files/175/republicans-trumpcare-obamacare-lies.html:text/html}
}
 
'''Kristol, Irving. 1995. Neoconservatism: The Autobiography of an Idea. Simon and Schuster.'''
 
@book{kristol_neoconservatism:_1995,
title = {Neoconservatism: {The} {Autobiography} of an {Idea}},
isbn = {978-0-02-874021-8},
shorttitle = {Neoconservatism},
abstract = {Neoconservatism is the movement that has provided the intellectual foundation for the resurgence of American conservatism in our time. And if neoconservatism can be said to have a father or an architect, that person is Irving Kristol.Neoconservatism is the most comprehensive selection of Kristol's influential writings on politics and economics, as well as the best of his now-famous essays on society, religion, culture, literature, education, and - above all - the "values" issues that have come to define the neo-conservative critique of contemporary life.These essays provide an unparalleled insight into the 50-year development of Kristol's social and political ideas, from an uneasy socialism tempered with religious orthodoxy, to a vigilant optimism about the future of the American experiment. Those already familiar with Kristol's work will especially enjoy the new autobiographical essay that introduces this volume; it is sprinkled with personal recollections about such luminaries as Lionel Trilling, Leo Strauss, Saul Bellow, Sidney Hook, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, and historian Gertrude Himmelfarb (who is also Mrs. Kristol). Those relatively new to Kristol's writings will be treated to some of the most lucid, insightful, entertaining, and intellectually challenging essays of our time.},
language = {en},
publisher = {Simon and Schuster},
author = {Kristol, Irving},
month = sep,
year = {1995},
note = {Google-Books-ID: S2nUuTagIw8C},
keywords = {Political Science / General}
}
 
'''Starr, Paul. 1995. “NOTHING NEO.” The New Republic, December 4.
'''
 
@article{starr_nothing_1995,
title = {{NOTHING} {NEO}},
abstract = {Review of Neoconservatism
The Autobiography of an Idea
Irving Kristol
(The Free Press, 493 pp. \$25)},
journal = {The New Republic},
author = {Starr, Paul},
month = dec,
year = {1995},
pages = {35--38},
file = {Nothing Neo book review.pdf:files/181/Nothing Neo book review.pdf:application/pdf }
}

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