Introduction: Intellectual History for Complicated Times
Section I MAPPING AMERICAN IDEAS
1. Wingspread: So What?
James Livingston
2. On Legal Fundamentalism: David Sehat
3. Freedom's Just Another Word? The Intellectual Trajectories of
the 1960s: Kevin M. Schultz
Section II IDEAS AND AMERICAN IDENTITIES
4. Philosophy
vs. Philosophers: A Problem in American Intellectual History: Amy
Kittelstrom
5. The Price of Recognition: Race and the Making of the Modern
University: Jonathan Holloway
6. Thanks, Gender! An Intellectual History of the Gym: Natalia
Mehlman Petrzela
7. Parallel Empires: Transnationalism and Intellectual History in
the Western Hemisphere: Ruben Flores
Section III DANGEROUS IDEAS
8. Toward a New, Old Liberal
Imagination: From Obama to Niebuhr and Back Again: Kevin
Mattson
9. Against the Liberal Tradition: An Intellectual History of the
American Left: Andrew Hartman
10. From "Tall Ideas Dancing" to Trump's Twitter Ranting: Reckoning
the Intellectual History of Conservatism: Lisa Szefel
11. The Reinvention of Entrepreneurship: Angus Burgin
Section IV CONTESTED IDEAS
12. War and American Thought:
Finding a Nation through Killing and Dying: Raymond Haberski
Jr.
13. United States in the World: The Significance of an Isolationist
Tradition: Christopher McKnight Nichols
14. Reinscribing Religious Authenticity: Religion, Secularism, and
the Perspectival Character of Intellectual History: K. Healan
Gaston
15. "The Entire Thing Was a Fraud": Christianity, Free thought, and
African American Culture: Christopher Cameron
Section V IDEAS AND CONSEQUENCES
16. Against and beyond
Hofstadter: Revising the Study of Anti-intellectualism: Tim
Lacy
17. Culture as Intellectual History: Broadening a Field of Study in
the Wake of the Cultural Turn: Benjamin L. Alpers
18. On the Politics of Knowledge: Science, Conflict, Power: Andrew
Jewett
Conclusion: The Idea of Historical Context and the Intellectual
Historian: Andrew Jewett
Contributors
Acknowledgments
Index
Raymond Haberski Jr. is Professor of History and Director of American Studies at Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis. He is the author of five books, including God and War. Andrew Hartman is Professor of History at Illinois State University. He is the author of two books, most recently, A War for the Soul of America.
American labyrinth contains a stimulating and useful collection of
essays by historians reflecting on American intellectual
history.... As a whole, the book convinces the reader that the
field of intellectual history is enjoying a renaissance. The book
will be especially prized by intellectual historians, but
historians of many different persuasions will find these essays
rewarding too.
*Choice*
In American Labyrinth, the ever combative and often funny James
Livingston presents a tour-de-force biographical meditation.
American Labyrinth, ultimately, is about refusing to see ideas as
just a one-way discourse.
*Society for US Intellectual History*
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