Introduction
Part I: An Annual Friend
Chapter One: Almanacs
Chapter Two: Astrology
Part II: The Liturgy of Popular Culture
Chapter Three: Death
Chapter Four: Authority
Chapter Five: Religion
Part III: Non-Protestants
Chapter Six: Catholics
Chapter Seven: Others
Conclusion
T.J. Tomlin is an Assistant Professor of History at the University of Northern Colorado.
"T.J. Tomlin's first book is a very important one...The
historiographic contributions of this slim volume are undeniable.
It expands our understanding of the relationship between
cheap print and popular religion and, perhaps more importantly,
outlines a shared religious sensibility that coursed through the
pages of Early America's most accessible printed
materials...It is a work of seminal importance for students of
early American religion, popular culture, and the history of the
book."--Anglican and Episcopal History
"A significant contribution to early American religious and book
history, A Dvinity for All Persuasions is historiographically
ambitious, intensively researched, and well written. It deserves to
be read as the authoritative book on the subject of early American
almanacs."--Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography
"The remarkable breadth of Tomlin's reading is the book's greatest
strength...A Divinity for All Persuasions is impressive in its
careful archival research and persuasive in its argument...Tomlin
takes this often-overlooked piece of the print sphere seriously as
an object of study, and in so doing reveals the complex forces at
work in this humble piece of the early American archive. The book
will appeal to scholars interested in a richly textured
understanding of early American print culture, especially those who
find debates over theological nuance too elitist, and who are
searching instead for some measure of the intellectual currents
circulating in the
tavern as opposed to the pulpit."--Early American Literature
"A Divinity for All Persuasions provides a fresh interpretation of
almanacs Tomlin's close reading of almanacs reveals an important
and often overlooked means of conveying and reinforcing biblical
teachings among a wide readership. In a fresh and persuasive
interpretation of almanacs Tomlin rejects the oft repeated
assessment that almanacs were filled with superstitions, the
occult, and magic that reflected a non-Christian element in
colonial popular
religion Tomlin has made an important contribution to our
understanding of both almanacs and popular religion."--Reviews in
American History
"[Tomlin's] advocacy for almanacs as data for analyzing popular
thought in early America is an accomplishment."--Journal of
American History
"A survey of almanacs from the colonial era to the early nineteenth
century... [W]onderfully presented." --Religion in American
History
"Tomlin offers a fresh, most welcome reading of almanacs as a
unique window onto early America's pan-Protestant religious
sensibility. Rather than consigning almanacs to 'secular' or
'occult' popular print undeserving of serious scholarly attention,
Tomlin offers a nuanced reading of 2,000 almanacs, many of which
have been underutilized by scholars despite their preservation in
major archives. Tomlin's findings will fascinate and inform
students of early
American religion and print culture." --Candy Gunther Brown, author
of The Word in the World: Evangelical Writing, Publishing, and
Reading in America, 1789-1880
"T. J. Tomlin will persuade you in his new book, A Divinity for All
Persuasions, that almanacs mattered."--Journal of Religion
"T. J. Tomlin has mastered a genre that sprawls across early
America in ways that almost defy analysis. Not in this book,
however, which reveals a world of common knowledge about religion
or Christianity that may have been more familiar to many Americans
than what was being said in sermons and substantial books." --David
D. Hall, Harvard Divinity School
"With its long-needed examination of eighteenth- and
nineteenth-century almanacs, T.J. Tomlin's A Divinity for All
Persuasions opens remarkable new perspectives on the religious
culture of early America. Tomlin's compelling study of thousands of
almanacs - arguably the most pervasive texts in America, aside from
the Bible - illuminates the enduring power of the new nation's
shared Protestant convictions." --Thomas S. Kidd, Professor of
History, Baylor
University
"Valuable for their data on the early American environment,
economy, politics, society, and family, these quirky-even
quaint-colonial texts seldom provide the sustained religious
content found in the introspective diaries and journals of
prominent figures such as Francis Asbury or Sarah Osborn, the
subjects of two outstanding recent biographies. And the seemingly
vapid 'filler' content-a wide range of borrowed or penned maxims,
poems, essays, and humorous
anecdotes-that surrounded the annual calendar pages has rarely been
considered on its own and almost never examined for its religious
significance. This is the uncharted terrain into which T. J.
Tomlin
ventures in his concise, beautifully written, painstakingly
researched, and carefully argued monograph, A Divinity for All
Persuasions." --William and Mary Quarterly
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |