Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 384
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7425-0841-5 • Hardback • October 2005 • $153.00 • (£119.00)
978-0-7425-0842-2 • Paperback • October 2005 • $54.00 • (£42.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
Martin Halliwell is professor of American studies at the University of Leicester. He is the author of four previous books: Romantic Science and the Experience of Self, Modernism and Morality, Critical Humanisms, and Images of Idiocy.
Introduction: Niebuhr and American Intellectual Culture
Part I: The Intellectual Family: Pragmatism, Religion and Ethics, 1910s–1940s
Chapter 1: "Half-Truths Set Against Half-Truths": James and Niebuhr
Chapter 2: A Certain Blindness to Liberalism: Dewey and Niebuhr
Chapter 3: Crossing the Invisible Boundary: Tillich and Niebuhr
Chapter 4: "Soldiers in the Same Division": The Niebuhr Brothers
Part II: Wider Dialogues: Cultural, National and Political Identity, 1940s–1970s
Chapter 5: "Digging About in the Slime": Niebuhr and American Psychoanalysis
Chapter 6: The Myths and Dramas of History: Niebuhr and Postwar Culture
Chapter 7: "The Achilles' Heel of Democracy": Niebuhr and US Foreign Policy
Chapter 8: The New Face of Love: Niebuhr and the Civil Rights Movement
Conclusion: Niebuhr and the Search for Leadership
This is a searching and open-minded analysis of the most original and influential religious thinker in the American Century. Halliwell shows that Niebuhr's flexible, frequently overextended mind was almost constantly shaped by political and social action. Niebuhr shared the limitations of other engaged leftists and liberals, but often boldly broke away from them. Halliwell nobly resists the temptation to reduce Niebuhr's long, unruly career to a formula or a thesis. He shows Niebuhr's genius as it bounced off and was refracted through a range of thinkers and political actors as broad as American culture. In exploring Niebuhr's dialogues with critics and admirers, Halliwell charts American intellectual life with greater depth than most histories achieve.
— David L. Chappell, author of A Stone of Hope: Prophetic Religion and the Death of Jim Crow
Martin Halliwell is one of the leading British scholars of modern American culture and, in The Constant Dialogue, he offers a sympathetic but critical analysis of Reinhold Niebuhr, a theologian whose sharp angularities of vision have not always elicited sympathy. It is a measure of the book's intelligence and care that the reader is impelled, not only to read Halliwell, but to return to Niebuhr's own texts.
— Michael O'Brien, University of Cambridge, author of Conjectures of Order
Martin Halliwell's book is a thorough and timely examination of one of the most important theologians and political philosophers of our times. It avoids easy conclusions to present Reinhold Niebuhr, and the American society of the 20th century, in all their complexity.
— Scott Lucas, University of Birmingham
At once sympathetic but critical, [Halliwell] presents Niebuhr and American society in all their complexity.
— P. L. Urban Jr., Swarthmore College; Choice Reviews
This is a marvelous book, generous in information, reflection, and the very dialogue that the author believes Reinhold Niebuhr so honored and practiced. Halliwell takes us deeply and valuably into Niebuhr's dialogues with some of the key figures of his long intellectual life.
— Journal of American History
The Constant Dialogue is a remarkable study of the scope of Reinhold Niebuhr's social thought and his intellectual connections to his contemporaries, from William James to James Baldwin. Niebuhr once described realism as the disposition to take all factors in a social and political situation into account. Martin Halliwell's book shows us how that disposition shaped his work and connected him to an extraordinary assembly of other leaders in all aspects of American life.
— Robin W. Lovin, Cary M. Maguire University Professor of Ethics Emeritus, Southern Methodist University