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Algernon Sidney Crapsey: The Last of the Heretics Author: Dr. Stephen T. Neese Date Of Publication: Dec 2007 Isbn13: 9781847183958 Isbn: 1-84718-395-6 Algernon Sidney Crapsey: “The Last of the Heretics,” is a biography about a man whose life reflected the religious, social and cultural conventions of late nineteenth and early twentieth century America. The fascinating changes that Crapsey experienced in his personal life paralleled the intellectual developments that attended the nation as it moved from a Protestant, Christian culture to a primarily secular one. Recognizing those transformations in the life of Crapsey helps us to understand them at the societal level as well. After a short stint in the military during the Civil War, Crapsey began his career as a young man caught up in the pomp and ritual of the Oxford Movement and Anglo-Catholicism. He maintained a long romance with the medieval communitarian- based Anglican institution. He eventually became a leading missioner or, one who brought instruction and Episcopal evangelism to various places both at home and abroad. He was, at one point, the leading candidate for the Bishopric of Omaha, Nebraska though he ultimately declined the offer. But as he became more successful at one point traveling to Great Britain, he eventually witnessed the discrepancies between the hierarchical church and the laity. The seeds of socialism both Christian and secular were set at this point. He became more and more broad- minded and liberal in his thinking leading to his utterances of heresy and eventual excommunication between 1905-07. His trial captivated the nation twenty years before the Scopes Monkey Trial, and every major newspaper carried its developments. As he moved on in years his life deepened becoming more interesting and legendary as a favorite circuit speaker, author, avowed communist and New York State’s first youth probation officer. For many, his death at the end of the decade of the twenties marked the end an era of modernism in America. As a true progressive, Crapsey had not only helped to initiate a process that brought successive modification to society, but he also helped to establish a tradition of liberality within the Episcopal Church. The subsequent controversies surrounding Bishops Pike and Spong attest to this tradition, as does the current controversy concerning the openly gay Bishop Gene Robinson. Dr. Stephen T. Neese is QAR Professor of American History at the State University of New York at Brockport. He has previously written “Algernon Sidney Crapsey and the Move for Presentment,” in Anglican and Episcopal History. Prior to this he has written 15 publications on Great Basin archaeology on file in the Special Collections library at the University of Nevada Las Vegas and with several United States Federal agencies.
‘Religious radicals are interesting people, and Stephen Neese’s fine account of the life of Algernon Sidney Crapsey, tried for heresy by the Episcopal Church, portrays a person moving to ever more radical stances. Based on exhaustive mining of family and archival material, as well as Crapsey’s writings, Neese brings to life a surprisingly neglected figure and fills a gap in the story of American religious liberalism at the turn of the twentieth century.’
Dewey D. Wallace, Jr., Professor of Religion, George Washington University "Stephen Neese's book does an exemplary job of describing the stormy life of Algernon Crapsey, an unjustly forgotten freethinker. This story is especially relevant today, when the Episcopal Church is again undergoing doctrinal disputes over matters elating to human sexuality, the reliability of scripture, and the role of the hierarchy. It would seem that Crapsey is unlikely to remain the "last heretic" after all." - Tim Madigan, Department of Philosophy, St. John Fisher College Price Uk Gbp: 39.99 Price Us Usd: 59.99
Sample pdf (including Table of Contents)
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From Kerouac Ascending: Memorabilia of the Decade of On the Road
“Katherine Burkman, best known for her contributions to Harold Pinter, Samuel Beckett, and modern drama studies in general, now provides an essential reference for students of Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and the beats through this memoir by Elbert Lenrow. A beloved teacher at the New School for Social Research, Lenrow met and taught Jack Kerouac in the late forties, befriending him and Allen Ginsberg as well. The book offers unprecedented insight into the beats in general and Kerouac’s development as a writer, thinker, and cultural force in American literature. Howard Cunnell, who introduces the book, notes that through his friendship with Kerouac, ‘Lenrow got to ride in what would become the most famous car in modern American literature.’ And thanks to this book, now readers of Kerouac Ascending do, too.” —Ann C. Hall, Professor, Ohio Dominican University; President, Harold Pinter Society
“The larger significance of the sustained and sustaining friendship between Elbert Lenrow and Kerouac and Ginsberg in this book is that it exhibits Jack and Allen in ways that are seldom, if ever, represented in accounts of their lives. As a bonus, from this fine, small book, the reader can acquire an enriched and enhanced understanding of the multifarious political, literary, and artistic relationships of virtually all the principal players in the cultural scene in the mid- to late 20th century.” —James L. Battersby, Professor Emeritus of English, Ohio State University
“Always their affectionate elder, Lenrow presents Kerouac and Ginsberg mostly in their own words, making no broad claim or judgments beyond the recognition that both writers spoke for their time as Walt Whitman did for his and that they have become iconic figures for a literary movement. It is a modest but important work presenting original materials saved by a gentle, sensitive, and literate man.” —Mark S. Auburn, Professor Emeritus of English, former Senior Vice President and Provost at the University of Akron
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