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Reaction and Retreat

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Title: Reaction and Retreat


1
Reaction and Retreat
  • Chapter 13

2
Prohibition
  • Alcohol Prohibition, a movement echoing the
    earlier temperance reform movements of the 19th
    century, enabled women to increase the scope of
    their roles and simultaneously address the white
    Protestant fears of the growing immigrant
    population
  • Drunkenness became a characteristic ascribed to
    Catholics, Jews, Irish, etc, reflecting both the
    religious and ethnic overtones of Prohibition
  • Banning alcohol was a means of assimilating the
    other to America
  • The Eighteenth Amendment was passed in 1919 in
    this sense Prohibition was successful, however it
    also spurred an underground crime network in
    response to the dry nation
  • The 21st Amendment ended Prohibition in 1933

3
Restricting Immigration
  • In 1924, Congress enacted a quota system for
    immigration which limited the number from any
    individual country based on the percentage of
    immigrants currently inhabiting America this
    privileged northern and western European
    countries and restricted most others
  • This political move reflected the mounting fear
    over the increasing pluralism being brought in by
    foreign countrymen and women in 1965 the
    restrictions would be lifted

4
Problems for Jews and Catholics
  • Anti-semitism was experiencing a surge
  • The trial of Leo Frank (accused of murdering a
    Christian woman) fueled a growing backlash
    against Jewish Americans when he was found
    guilty after a mockery of a trial (191)
  • Henry Ford sponsored the publication of Protocols
    of the Elders of Zion, which described the Jewish
    economic conspiracy to take over the world
  • Protestants were suspicious of Catholics,
    particularly following WWI (many Germans were
    Catholics)
  • The 1928 election of Catholic governor Al Smith
    (NY) was vilified for his support of the
    eradication of Prohibition, seen as an
    infiltration of Catholic values
  • However, what this anti-Jewish and anti-Catholic
    response really shows is how firmly embedded
    Judaism and Catholicism were in American society

5
Institutionalized Intolerance
  • The Ku Klux Klan experienced a resurgence
    beginning in 1915 the trial of Leo Frank and the
    film The Birth of a Nation reinvigorated efforts
    to eradicate non-white, non-Protestant elements
    from America
  • William Joseph Simmons was the primary force
    behind the Klans rebirth, turning it into a
    religiously-based terrorist body (195) that
    believed that it was a force for moral good and
    social reform, which simply employed
    any-means-necessary to accomplish its goals
  • They had a different understanding of a unified
    America (195)

6
New Media and Religion
  • Religion and media like radio and eventually
    television have had a mutually-edifying
    relationship (in spite of critique by those who
    saw communications media as dangerous to the
    religious and moral fabric of the nation (196)
  • Beginning in the 1930s America witnessed the
    marriage between religion and media as religious
    figures took to the radio airwaves and film
  • Charles Fuller began the Old Fashioned Revival
    Hour, which would become the most popular
    program on the radio
  • Inserting themselves into the morally ambiguous
    film industry were religious films such as King
    of Kings
  • Media enabled religious figures to expand their
    ministry in a way that was not possible before
  • Yet they often served to homogenize or assimilate
    religious difference into a least common
    denominator (198) creating an overarching
    religious viewpoint
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