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Title page for ETD etd-07182005-134920


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Mason, Patrick Q
Author's Email Address pmason1@nd.edu
URN etd-07182005-134920
Title Sinners in the Hands of an Angry Mob: Violence against Religious Outsiders in the U.S. South, 1865-1910
Degree Doctor of Philosophy
Department History
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
R. Scott Appleby Committee Chair
Gail Bederman Committee Member
George Marsden Committee Member
John McGreevy Committee Member
Richard Pierce Committee Member
Keywords
  • violence
  • U.S. history
  • southern history
  • African Americans
  • Mormons
  • Latter-day Saints
  • Jews
  • Catholics
  • religious outsiders
  • religion and violence
Date of Defense 2005-07-06
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
Studies of violence in the late nineteenth-century South focus almost exclusively on racial and political violence against African Americans. While this emphasis is both understandable and appropriate, what has been largely neglected is the violence committed against religious outsiders, and more generally their overall treatment in what was essentially a hegemonic culture of evangelical Protestantism. In addition to the many instances of violence against African American churches and ministers in the South, there were also dozens of episodes of anti-Jewish violence and literally hundreds of cases of anti-Mormon violence from 1865 to 1910. Acknowledging and understanding this relatively hidden chapter in American history provides us with unique insights into postbellum southern culture and the sometimes violent side of the American experiment in religious pluralism.

This dissertation adds to the growing body of scholarship exploring the relationships between religion and violence in southern history and American history more broadly by making three primary contributions. First, it uncovers numerous untold narratives of violence against southern religious outsiders. Second, it examines the interrelationships between minority religious groups and the dominant evangelical Protestant culture in the South. Third, it explores the various ways in which religious identity and religious motivations, whether explicit or implicit, informed the attitudes, actions, and reactions of the perpetrators as well as the victims of the violence. The four groups treated herein—black Christians, Mormons, Jews, and Catholics—were the groups most commonly seen (and treated) by contemporaries as providing substantial challenges to the cultural, racial, and religious orthodoxies of southern Anglo-Saxon Protestantism.

In short, this dissertation is a study of the multiple religious dimensions of violence in the postbellum South. Although some episodes treated herein qualify as overt religious violence, in most of the cases religion was one among a number of variables that shaped and triggered violent interactions, including race, gender, family structure, politics, class, economics, and ethnicity. As a set of sacred doctrines and practices, a cultural category, or an analytical lens, religion played different roles in the ways that black Christians, Mormons, Jews, and Catholics precipitated, experienced, and responded to southern violence as religious outsiders.

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