Protestantism and National Identity

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329 pages 2007

About This Book

"This volume traces the complex contribution which protestantism made to national identity in the British Isles between the Stuart and the Victorian age. It therefore examines an essential, if ambiguous, foundation of British patriotism in the period when the United Kingdom was formed and emerged as a world power." "Often challenging existing work, the essays both question whether nationalism was a secular and 'modern' phenomenon, and ask whether protestantism could support any simple vision of a united, imperial, and 'elect' Britain. Covering a wide variety of subjects, the authors show that whilst the reformed faith was always central to 'British' self-awareness, it could also divide the peoples of Britain and Ireland, could cast doubt on their greatness and could dissolve any insistence on the uniqueness of these nations."--Jacket.

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