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Selling Catholicism
Cód:
491_9780813120676
When the popularity of Milton Berles television show began to slip, Berle quipped, At least Im losing my ratings to God! He was referring to the popularity of Life Is Worth Living and its host, Bishop Fulton J. Sheen. The show aired from 1952 to 1957, and Sheen won an Emmy, beating competition that included Lucille Ball, Jimmy Durante, and Edward R. Murrow. What was the secret to Sheens on-air success? Christopher Lynch examines how he reached a diverse audience by using television to synthesize traditional American Protestantism with a reassuring vision of Catholicism as patriotic and traditional. Sheen provided his viewers with a sense of stability by sentimentalizing the medieval world and holding it out as a model for contemporary society. Offering clear-cut moral direction in order to eliminate the anxiety of cultural change, he discussed topics ranging from the role of women to the perils of Communism. Sheens rhetoric united both Protestant and Catholic audiences, reflecting -and forming- a vision of mainstream, postwar America. Lynch argues that Sheens persuasive television presentations helped Catholics gain social acceptance and paved the way for religious ecumenism in America. Yet, Sheens work also sowed the seeds for the crisis of competing ideologies in the modern American Catholic Church.
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