Vanderbilt Divinity School: Education, Contest and Change

Vanderbilt Divinity School: Education, Contest and Change

by Dale A. Johnson (Editor)
Vanderbilt Divinity School: Education, Contest and Change

Vanderbilt Divinity School: Education, Contest and Change

by Dale A. Johnson (Editor)

Hardcover(1ST)

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Overview

The Vanderbilt Divinity School is one of only four university-based interdenominational institutions in the United States, and the only one in the South. As such, its history provides a distinct vantage point for viewing what has occurred in theological education since the latter part of the nineteenth century. In this book, the contributors explore the school's history in terms of four main themes:

Engagement with southern culture, present from the beginnings of the university but taking on special significance in the mid-twentieth century around the issue of race;

The transition from an institution of the church (Methodist) to an independent and interdenominational school with a liberal Protestant orientation;

The development of the modern research university, evident in the establishment of a graduate program in religion in addition to its program for the profession of ministry;

From the 1950s, a growing concern with diversity and inclusivity, in keeping with national and international issues and developments both religious and cultural, which has broadened the school's sense of ecumenism and deepened its commitments to social justice.

Conflict has played an important part in shaping the history of the Vanderbilt Divinity School, from struggles over initial visions to questions of financial support and institutional control, from local debates over academic freedom to national issues of social justice. Especially noteworthy are the transformations the school has undergone since 1960: the "James Lawson affair," where the divinity school faculty resigned over the expulsion of an African American graduate student who was organizing local lunch counter sit-ins; the impact of social change on the school since the late 1960s; and the contributions of women and African Americans, including their appointment to the faculty.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826513861
Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
Publication date: 02/27/2002
Edition description: 1ST
Pages: 432
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Dale A. Johnson is professor of church history in the Divinity School at Vanderbilt University and author of The Changing Shape of English Nonconformity, 1825–1925.

Table of Contents


Contents

Part I: Contexts
1. Theological Studies in the Context of the University
Joseph C. Hough Jr.
2. Vanderbilt Divinity School in the Context of American Theological Education
Glenn T. Miller
Part II: School of Prophets?
3. In the Beginning: The Biblical Department
Frank Gulley Jr.
4. Charting a New Vision: The School of Religion
James P. Byrd Jr.
5. A School for Prophets of the New South: The Dilemma of Engaging Southern Culture
Richard C. Goode
Part III: Transformations
6. The Lawson Affair, 1960: A Conversation
7. Social Transformation and Theological Education at Vanderbilt Since 1960
Howard L. Harrod
8. Women's Work
Kim Maphis Early
9. The African American Presence in the Divinity School
Peter J. Paris
Part IV: Studies
10. Tracking the Course of Study in the Divinity School
Edward Farley
11. Graduate Studies in Religion
Eugene TeSelle
12. Jewish Studies at Vanderbilt
Peter J. Haas
13. Educating Disciples
Anthony L. Dunnavant
Part V: Perspective
14. A Century and a Quarter of Theology: A Review
James O. Duke
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