Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 512
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8476-8986-6 • Paperback • July 2000 • $30.00 • (£25.00)
978-0-585-24589-8 • eBook • January 2000 • $28.50 • (£19.99)
John E. Semonche is professor of history at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He is the author of Religion and Constitutional Government in the United States, Charting the Future: The Supreme Court Responds to a Changing Society, 1890-1920, and Ray Stannard Baker: A Quest for Democracy in Modern America, 1870-1918. He lives in Durham, North Carolina.
Chapter 1 Introduction: The Ties That Bind
Chapter 2 "In the Beginning Was the Word," 1620-1791
Chapter 3 Establishing the Parameters of Priestly Duties, 1790-1821
Chapter 4 Expounding the Holy Writ in Troubled Times, 1810-1860
Chapter 5 Interpreting New and Old Holy Books: Part I: Beginning to Widen the Civil Religious Community, 1860-1917
Chapter 6 Interpreting New and Old Holy Books: Part II: Protecting Property and Other Individual Rights in the Changing Economy, 1864-1917
Chapter 7 Responding to New Crises and Exploring the Implications of the Civil Theology, 1917-1941
Chapter 8 Searching for the Meaning of Loyalty within the American Civil Religion, 1940-1959
Part 9 Struggling to Equalize Justice and Expand the Civil Theology's Reach
Chapter 10 Part I: The Matter of Race, 1954-1997
Chapter 11 Part II: Other Matters Including Gender and Sectarian Religion: 1962-1997
Chapter 12 Making the Scriptures on Individual Rights Nationally Operative, 1960-1997
Chapter 13 The Blessings of Liberty
Chapter 14 Notes
Chapter 15 Justices of the Supreme Court
Chapter 16 Case Index
Chapter 17 Subject Index
In his illuminating study of the significance of the Supreme Court in American public culture, Professor Semonche contends that, from the very beginning, the Justices have played an unappreciated role in shaping American identity and binding us together as a nation. Readers will be fascinated by this challenge to the fashionable naysayers, for Semonche offers a much cheerier view of the performance of the high priests of our civil religion.
— William E. Leuchtenburg, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, author of The Supreme Court Reborn
The author not only provides a detailed history of the Court's consistent protection of individual rights, but also how the cultural dependence on that consistency makes this a law-abiding nation.
— Library Journal
Professor Semonche has written an excellent analytical history of the role and function of what he calls 'the high priests of the American civil religion.' He has succeeded ably in weaving both the theory and the practice of the high tribunal into his historical presentation, and he never lets the reader forget that, as he puts it, 'the Court plays the most significant role as an actor within the culture.' Semonche's tome is a welcome addition to the literature in the field; he reasons comprehensively; and he writes engagingly.
— Henry J. Abraham, University of Virginia
Semonche's book is worthy of commendation for having illuminated the role that the Supreme Court has come to play over time, and the consequences for American politics, life, and culture. Keeping the Faith's central thesis is one that all serious students of the Supreme Court will need to consider.
— David Stebenne, Dept. of History, Ohio State; H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online
Semonche's broad legal-historical survey stands as a model of intelligence and grace . . . warrants the consideration of all students of American law.
— M. Cantor, Universtiy of Massachussets at Amherst; Choice Reviews, December 1998
Gracefully written for a wide audience.
— Kenneth L. Karst, University of California, Los Angeles; American Historical Review
An innovative study of the history of the Supreme Court that draws imaginatively on concepts of culture in general and civic religion in particular. Every student of the Court will benefit from Semonche's insightful analysis that has as much to say about the values that bind Americans as it does about constitutional law and the justices.
— Kermit Hall, North Carolina State University
The justices of the Supreme Court are the nation's 'high priests,' and their primary function is to interpret our 'holy writ,' that is the U.S. Constitution. They are the keepers of the flame of liberty, the defenders of the covenant, our help in ages past, and our hope in years to come. . . . The author has good case to make about this civic faith or civil religion.
— Edwin S. Gaustad, University of California, Riverside; Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture
A fascinating look at the history and role of the United States Supreme Court. . . . The book would make an excellent supplemental text for classes on Supreme Court history or on civil liberties.
— Craig Hemmens, Boise State University; Perspectives on Political Science
A thoughtful, balanced, and perceptive account of the Supreme Court in American government and politics. . . . A sweeping historical survey, richly informed.
— Herman Belz, University of Maryland
A remarkable study of the Supreme Court's crutial—and yet often overlooked and certainly underappreciated—role in the formation and development of American political culture.
— Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences
Engaging and provocative, Keeping the Faith is a book that deserves a wide audience among those interested in constitutional history. Semonche is able to summarize Court history compellingly and efficiently. Semonche is able to condense a good deal in a few paragraphs, his grasp of the full range of the Court's history is exemplary, and he has developed a distinctive thesis that will catch the attention of both scholars and general readers of serious nonfiction.
— Law and History Review
—Winner of a CHOICE Outstanding Book Award