Searching for God in Britain and Beyond
Reading Letters to Malcolm Muggeridge, 1966–1982
- Publisher
- McGill-Queen's University Press
- Initial publish date
- Jan 2022
- Category
- History, 20th Century
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9780228010081
- Publish Date
- Jan 2022
- List Price
- $65.00
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Where to buy it
Description
When writer and media personality Malcolm Muggeridge unexpectedly converted to Christianity in the 1960s, fans around the world flocked to his devotional writings and television programs about his spiritual journey. Because Muggeridge was critical of institutional Christianity and initially refused to join a church, he inspired a special affinity in those who were disillusioned with mainstream religious authority. Readers from around the world sent him deeply personal letters describing their spiritual and religious lives, revealing their anxieties, doubts, and hopes about the future of Christianity.
In Searching for God in Britain and Beyond David Reagles draws on nearly two thousand of these remarkable fan letters to explore the thoughts and feelings of ordinary Christians in a time of cultural and religious upheaval. In these candid letters, Muggeridge’s correspondents wrestled with their experiences of faith and doubt, the value of institutional religion, uncertainties about permissiveness in society, the proper role of Christian social activism, and the forces of secularism. For these fans and skeptics alike, reading and writing were a vital means of working out their religious identities and convictions amid the supposed decline of Christendom.
Searching for God in Britain and Beyond provides a rare and fascinating glimpse into the inner worlds of ordinary Christians in the 1960s and 1970s, revealing how the secularization of postwar society felt to average people.
About the author
David G. Reagles is assistant professor of history at Bethany Lutheran College.
Editorial Reviews
"Through a close reading of Malcolm Muggeridge's fan mail, Searching for God in Britain and Beyond successfully places emotions at the heart of our understanding of the Western religious crisis of the late twentieth century. Reagles offers us fascinating insights into a textual community grappling with questions of identity, betrayal, and secularization." Sam Brewitt-Taylor, University of Oxford, author of Christian Radicalism in the Church of England and the Invention of the British Sixties, 1957–1970
"Reagles approach is robust, well informed, and insightful. He has uncovered a rich, illuminating and highly significant tranche of unexamined primary material which sustains this excellent exploration, and offers new perspectives into an arena of enduring controversy." Alana Harris, Kings College London, and author of The Schism of '68: Catholicism, Contraception and Humanae Vitae in Europe, 1945–1975