6533b836fe1ef96bd12a1269

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Evangelical Global Engagement and the American State after World War II

Axel R. Schäfer

subject

National securityHegemonyAmerican Centurybusiness.industryGeneral Arts and Humanitiesmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesWorld War IIAssertionGeneral Social SciencesEmpire06 humanities and the arts050601 international relations0506 political science060104 historyPower (social and political)State (polity)Political sciencePolitical economyDevelopment economics0601 history and archaeologybusinessmedia_common

description

The resurgence of American evangelicalism since the 1940s unfolded in conjunction with efforts by policymakers to instrumentalize religion for the assertion of empire. Missions and foreign aid are two key areas where these dynamics intersected. They show that evangelicals were both at home in the “American century” and deeply critical of global power. Rather than being a weakness, however, these tensions enabled the movement to become a crucial arbiter at a time when the country's new role was not yet firmly legitimized at home. In particular, evangelicalism helped reconcile isolationist, antistatist, and antimilitarist sentiments with hegemonic aspirations, the national security state, and the military–industrial complex.

https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021875816001377