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Dissenting Praise
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Table of Contents

Isabel Rivers and David L. Wykes: Introduction
1: Elizabeth Clarke: Hymns, Psalms, and Controversy in the Seventeenth Century
2: J. R. Watson: The Hymns of Isaac Watts and the Tradition of Dissent
3: Françoise Deconinck-Brossard: The Circulation and Reception of Philip Doddridge's Hymns
4: Ken Manley: John Rippon and Baptist Hymnody
5: David M. Thompson: Finding Successors to 'the Poet of the Sanctuary': Josiah Conder in Context
6: Clyde Binfield: W. Garrett Horder and Congregational Hymnody: An Introduction to The Hymn Lover and its Author
7: Alan Ruston: James Martineau and the Evolution of Unitarian Hymnody
8: Nicholas Temperley: The Music of Dissent
9: E. Wyn James: The Evolution of the Welsh Hymn

About the Author

Isabel Rivers obtained her BA at Girton College, Cambridge and her PhD at Columbia University. A former Reader at the University of Leicester and Reader and Professor at the University of Oxford, since 2004 she has been Professor of Eighteenth-Century English Literature and Culture in the School of English and Drama, Queen Mary, University of London, and Co-Director of the Dr Williams's Centre for Dissenting Studies. Her main interests are in the relations between
literature, religion, philosophy, and the history of the book in the long eighteenth century.
David Wykes obtained his BSc at Durham and his PhD at Leicester, where he taught for many years. He has been Director of Dr Williams's Library, London, since 1998, and Co-Director of the Dr Williams's Centre for Dissenting Studies since it was established in September 2004. He is an Honorary Reader in the School of English and Drama at Queen Mary, University of London. His main interests are the history of religious dissent from the late seventeenth century to the early nineteenth century.

Reviews

Its consistently thought-provoking and original scholarship will ensure that this volume becomes an important point of reference for future studies of the dissenting hymn, particularly in its eighteenth-century incarnations. More than that, though, it is a fine example of what a strong edited volume can do. The contributors varying approaches and viewpoints ensure a thorough coverage of the subject from several angles, while the unifying structure prevents the individual contributions from seeming isolated or unrelated. It should be heartily recommended as a valuable introduction to hymnody in all its aspects during this period.
*Kelsey Jackson Williams, Notes and Queries*

As befits a work which will provide the foundation for much further study many of the chapters contain a wealth of biographical and bibliographical information ... Throughout the level of textual and contextual analysis is high
*George Southcombe, Journal of Ecclesiastical History*

this wide-ranging and authoritative study of dissenting hymns from the seventeenth to the early twentieth centuries is a welcome contribution both to the study of the hymn and to the history of dissent.
*Jeremy Gregory, The English Historical Review*

the book is a rich reference work
*Mike Harris, Evangelicals Now*

The importance of the hymn may have dwindled in popular culture, but it is still crucial in understanding cultural development and religious identity of the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. This is an ideal guide, and invaluable resource, for such scholarship.
*Felicity James, The Review of English Studies*

This book brings together leading historians of English and Welsh Dissent to celebrate and chronicle the Nonconformist love affair with hymns... there are delightful pen portraits of the leading figures in the development of dissenting hymnody.
*Ian Bradley, The Tablet*

The learned editors top and tail this volume of essays with a scholarly introduction and some useful bibliographies. They have chosen a strong team of experts, each of whom takes up the baton from his or her predecessor, thus creating something approximating to a continuous narrative.
*Michael Wheeler, The Church Times*

the sense of the personal, for it is this that is ultimately the most compelling aspect of Dissenting Praise.
*Francis Stewart, Literature and Theology*

Hymn enthusiasts and scholars will want this book and those of us who are Anglican will learn from it a great deal about Nonconformist hymnody.
*Royal School of Church Music*

This is a valuable survey and will be a worthwhile read for those interested in hymns and their origins.
*Peter Young, Congregational History Society Magazine*

extremely useful and recommended to any scholar with an interest in devotional text and music from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. The authors represented in this collection are nearly as venerable as the hymns they address, and most of the essays are excellent.
*Charles Edward McGuire, Music and Letters*

Given the centrality of the hymn in the dissenting traditions, the study of its development is a useful window into the theological and social histories of its various confessions. This volume of well-written essays is a welcome guide.
*Scott McGinnins, Church History*

Masterfully researched, written, and edited, this outstanding volume is highly recommended for researchers, graduate students, and libraries.
*Darin D. Lenz, Religious Studies Review*

This book lives up to expectations. The contributing authors are authorities in their respective fields, the subject range is wide ... There is material here of great interest to the historian of Christian worship, as well as more generally to church historians who are interested in the way that hymnody has expressed and influenced doctrinal identities and reflected cultural and social trends.
*Christopher Ellis, Baptist Quarterly*

a critical and illuminating study
*Tom Schwanda, SPIRITUS*

It succeeds impressively ... As a result of this book, scholars of dissent have a very strong base on which to build.
*George Southcombe, Journal of Ecclesiastical History*

Dissenting Praise is to be much commended ... thorough and clear ... fascinating.
*Janet Wootton, Journal of the United Reformed Church History Society*

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